Because the mirror is colder water vapors are condensed on the mirror.
it is because when you take a warm or hot shower, then water that you are using condense it to the air & it covers the mirror of your bathroom.
A gas is changing to a liquid. Namely evaporated water (such as steam from a shower) is coming into contact with the cooler mirror and turning back into liquid water.
The warm, moist air coming from the shower will condense to water droplets on contact with a cool mirror or bathroom window.
the mirror that you are holding will keep going in...............
A shower mirror is installed to assist the person taking the shower. Men may use it to help while shaving their face while women may use it for other facial grooming such as plucking or putting on face masks. Many shower mirrors do not fog up in the heat of the shower like normal mirrors.
No. The steam from a hot shower fogs the mirror.
This usually happens after a hot or warm shower because the water vapour in the air becomes a liquid again. It condenses on your mirror. Condensation is taking place!
It is called condensation.
The steam condenses to form water droplets on the cooler surface.
Cold air holds less moisture than warm air. When you run the shower with hot water, the moisture condenses on the cold mirror surface causing it to fog up. If you run the shower cold, the mirror will not fog up.
I get those when I take a hot shower too, apparently it happens when the water is too hot.
if i take a shower with a sope my dody was clear.
Condensation can occur on a window or a mirror, due to the water vapor and/or steam from a hot shower.
The steam off the hot water and goes on everything. You can't see it on the walls but if you touch it it's wet. You see it on the mirror because it is clear.
it is because when you take a warm or hot shower, then water that you are using condense it to the air & it covers the mirror of your bathroom.
A heated mirror for a shower is highly preferred. Barring that, get a fogless mirror.
When you take a shower the water droplets have a greater surface area then simply having the water sit in the tub as it does in a bath. The leads to increased evaporation. With more moisture in the air it is easier for condensation to occur on a cool surface such as a mirror.