Because the cold air around you cannot hold as much water as warm air in your breath, the moisture in your breath condenses when it hits the cold air and forms into a little cloud.
take place when you inhale and exhale?
take place when you inhale and exhale?
take place when you inhale and exhale?
scilent death
How much moisture is lost from exhaling in a 24 hour period?
The amount of moisture - water vapour, that air can carry without the water condensing - turning into droplets, depends on the temperature. Exhaled air has a fair bit of moisture in it that it has picked up from the lungs and the airways. If you exhale when it's warm, that moisture stays suspended in the air, and you don't see it. If you exhale when it's cold, the moisture condenses into tiny droplets, which you see as fog. Pretty much the same as when beads form on a cold glass or bottle or soda can. Or why a mirror steams over when you breathe on it.
If you look at it from the perspective of 11.5 days = 276 hours, this many hours would have to occur on 12 or 13 different days, with an overlap of 12 hours it could be spread either entirely on a 12th day or it could also be placed on the rist day and an additional 13th day would be added. For example Day 1 <.ooo....1<11.99999... hrs Day 2 24hrs Day 3 24hrs Day 4 24hrs Day 5 24hrs Day 6 24hrs Day 7 24hrs Day 8 24hrs Day 9 24hrs Day 10 24hrs Day 11 24hrs Day 12 24hrs Day 13 <.ooo....1<11.99999... hrs OR Day 1 24hrs Day 2 24hrs Day 3 24hrs Day 4 24hrs Day 5 24hrs Day 6 24hrs Day 7 24hrs Day 8 24hrs Day 9 24hrs Day 10 24hrs Day 11 24hrs Day 12 12hrs
Because the cold air around you cannot hold as much water as warm air in your breath, the moisture in your breath condenses when it hits the cold air and forms into a little cloud.
Mon Opens 7.30am Tue 24hrs Wed 24hrs Thu 24hrs Fri 24hrs Sat Close 10pm Sun 10am- 4pm
3-4 lt/24hrs.
because carbon dioxide and water from the cells are waste carried by the blood to the lungs to be taken out of the body
none.
No it rotates much as Earth every 24hrs approx: Venus is much slower
It depends on how much you have had to drink but it is entirely possible.
Yes - moisture, nitrogen, alcohol vapour and any other volatile compound that happens to be in the blood or in the air that is breathed in.
It's water vapour. Because the cold air and the moisture from the exhale meet, the cold air can't hold the moisture, so you see the mist, which is actually water droplets.