No, actually steam is a form of gas. It's all about matter
When steam is a liquid or goes into a liquid state via condensation, then it is no longer deemed as gas or steam. Thus it is called liquid.
Steam doesn't cool off liquids because it is the release of thermal energy from the water, and that is why, it is therefore hot. If the steam is coming off the liquid itself, it is heat being released by the liquid, but the liquid is not necessarily getting cooler. Think of water boiling on a stove. There may be plenty of steam coming off the water, but the water continues to boil. Subjecting a cool liquid to steam will certainly not cool the liquid.
When liquid turns into steam, it is called vaporization or evaporation.
The steam when cooled changes back to liquid water
If the steam is transformed in a liquid this liquid can be evatporated again.
Steam and vapor are in the form of a gas. Liquid water is in the form of a liquid.
Air is primarily composed of gases like nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide, so it is not a liquid. Water can exist in three states: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (steam). Steam is the gaseous form of water, not a liquid.
at 100 degrees liquid water will go to steam and steam will go to liquid water
if liquid evaporates, it will become steam.
The process of steam condensing to form liquid water involves the transfer of heat energy from the steam to the surrounding cooler environment. As the steam loses heat, its temperature decreases and it undergoes a phase change from gas to liquid. This results in the formation of liquid water droplets.
Condensation and liquid water result from cooling steam.
Steam takes up more space than liquid water because the molecules of water in steam have higher energy and are further apart from each other compared to when they are in liquid form. This causes steam to have a larger volume and be less dense than liquid water.