yes it is
Water is typically heated from a liquid state, not from water vapor. Water vapor forms when liquid water is heated to its boiling point and evaporates into the air. To heat water using water vapor, one would need to first condense the vapor back into liquid water before further heating it.
Evaporation.
distillation
Water vapor is evaporated water, it is mainly caused by the heating of water by the sun.
The process of liquid water changing into water vapor due to heating is called evaporation. During evaporation, molecules at the surface of the liquid gain enough energy to escape into the air as vapor.
No, this is definitely a physical change, absolutely not a chemical.
It turns into a vapor, and you do it by heating it to or past the boiling point.
It turns into a vapor, and you do it by heating it to or past the boiling point.
Water vapor and evaporated water are not exactly the same thing. Water vapor refers to water in its gaseous state, while evaporated water specifically refers to water that has changed from a liquid to a vapor due to heating or exposure to air. Evaporated water is a process that leads to the formation of water vapor.
Gases like water vapor typically condense when they are cooled rather than heated. When the temperature of water vapor decreases, its molecules lose energy and come together to form liquid water. Heating water vapor generally causes it to remain in a gaseous state or expand, preventing condensation. Thus, condensation occurs during cooling, not heating.
You can change liquid water into water vapor through a process called evaporation. This occurs when the liquid water is heated, causing the molecules to gain enough energy to break free and turn into vapor.
It is called steam if man made by heating water. If it is natural, it is fog.