yes, like fog is the same as water vapor. i learned this in science the other day. because my teacher said there is water vapor on the mountain.. and i was like yeah theres fog too! HE LAUGHED FOREVER!
No
If you meant Precipitation as in weather that refers to rain or snow.
Water vapor is water in the form of a gas.
Yes, kind of. Water vapor refers to moisture in the air while moisture can be moisture on an object, clothing, person, etc.
Yes.
Yes, but that stuff you can see isn't steam. Neither steam nor water vapor are visible. The could of white stuff you can see above a boiling kettle is water droplets formed by the condensation of the water vapor/steam as it collides with the cooler air outside the kettle.
They are made of different states of matter
Turning a vapour into a liquid is called condensation.
In a closed system, water can be boiled until it produces water vapor (steam). If the steam is then condensed through a coil of tubing and collected in another container, the same volume of water winds up in the second container that you started with originally. An action created and then reversed to it's original point. Note that this is in a closed system.
Water molecules escape from the fluid phase into the gas phase and become 'vapor'(that how the gas phase is mentioned, so the words: 'gas vapor' are a bit 'double' in meaning about the same!).It is not necessarily to happen at boiling temperature (100o Celsius), fluid water also evaporises at lower temperatures (e.g. room temp. or even lower).
Yes, but that stuff you can see isn't steam. Neither steam nor water vapor are visible. The could of white stuff you can see above a boiling kettle is water droplets formed by the condensation of the water vapor/steam as it collides with the cooler air outside the kettle.
Well Vapor And Steam Are The Same Thing,In That Case It Would Be Evaporation Since Vapor/Steam When Liquid Turns Into A Gas :)
No. Steam is warm water vapor. Heat is added or external energy that causes a rise in temperature.
steam
Water vapor.
Water vapor and steam are the same thing, but that stuff you can see isn't steam. Neither steam nor water vapor are visible. The cloud of white stuff you can see above a boiling kettle is water droplets formed by the condensation of the water vapor/steam as it collides with the cooler air outside the kettle.
They are made of different states of matter
No. Steam is the gaseous form of water, and is invisible. The cloud of white stuff you can see above a boiling kettle is water vapor; droplets formed by the condensation of the steam as it collides with the cooler air outside the kettle.
Yes, they are synonyms.
yes
It is called water vapor, and it has the same formula as water, H20 (g).*Water vapor at a temperature higher than its boiling point is called steam.
Turning a vapour into a liquid is called condensation.