You would use distilled water for your iron. Distilled water is water that is recovered (condensed) overhead of a boiling source of water generally at low pressure (near atmospheric). So, they are essentially the same.
no - steam is water - water is good.
The main everyday uses, are to fill steam irons and top up car batteries. Laboratories also use it where water needs to be added to some experiment.
Most common uses of distilled water are, >On cars batterries. >On steam irons. >And mostly in hospitals. Distilled water is used because its clean and does harms stuff,unlike tap water. Most common uses of distilled water are, >On cars batterries. >On steam irons. >And mostly in hospitals. Distilled water is used because its clean and does harms stuff,unlike tap water.
Vapors must be condensed to obtaindrinking water. Salt water is not good to drink.
Indefinitely. It simply water that has been heated to boiling point, the steam drawn off, and condensed back into water. Distilling removes things like trace elements (chlorine etc) that are normally present in ordinary tap-water.
Even if the condensed milk was of a water activity below 0.85, it isn't a good idea to leave it out overnight.
I would suggest either Amazon.com, Ebay.com, Overstock.com, or possibly Walmart or Kmart, both have websites that allow online shopping. Nextag.com is a great site to shop for steam press irons. They have over 40 stream press irons from a wide variety of brands and different models to fit you budget.
If you are looking for irons priced around $500, you could get the Callaway X-18 irons, which is a very good set at a reasonable price.
The states of matter are solid, liquid, gas. Solid water is ice or snow, good for skating on, skiing on, or cooling your soda pop. Liquid water is good for drinking, bathing, boating. Gaseous water is steam, good for steam engines, ships engines, steam cooking vegetables. Etc etc.
The steam engine helped to power the Industrial Revolution. Before steam power, most factories and mills were powered by water, wind, horse, or man. Water was a good source of power, but factories had to be located near a river.
That's likely to make you itchier.
A good example of a simple Physical Change occurs in a tea pot. The hot, liquid water boils and goes off as steam. Steam is still water (no chemical change,) but is now a gas.