steam is to liquid as smoke is to fire
Close... water:steam::liquid:vapor (or, in normal words, "Water is to steam as liquid is to vapor.")
Steam is water vapor, 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.
Steam is gaseous form of water...its formed while boiling the water,whereas vapours are formed while evaporation
water is to ice as steam is to water
water.
Because when ice is heated it turns into water, and when water is heated it turns to steam.
Ice
Burn
liquid
Water
No, Air is a gas water is a liquid Steam is a liquid vapor
why does steam take up more space than liquid water
Boiling water has a lower latent heat than steam. Steam is the transition from liquid to gas for boiling water. If by boiling water you mean liquid water at the temperature of 100 degrees Celsius then yes, steam has a higher latent heat.
evaporation .
The particles them self, assuming that you are referring to the individual atoms/molecules that makes up a liquid, does not change in "density" when going from one state of matter to another (liquid -> steam). However, the density changes for a certain amount of the matter, for instance one liter. One liter of water weighs a lot more than one liter of water steam. This is because the density of liquid water is much higher than water steam. The density of liquid water is 1000g/liter while the density of steam is 0.8g/liter. In other words, liquid water is over 1200 times denser than water vapor!
at 100 degrees liquid water will go to steam and steam will go to liquid water
No, Air is a gas water is a liquid Steam is a liquid vapor
water is a liquid, steam is a gas
Steam and vapor are in the form of a gas. Liquid water is in the form of a 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.
solid = ice gas = steam liquid = water
Water
Water is formed as a liquid when steam meets a cold surface.
Ice, liquid water, and steam.
If the steam is transformed in a liquid this liquid can be evatporated again.
The steam when cooled changes back to liquid water
Condensation and liquid water result from cooling steam.