Water turns to steam (or in other words, it boils) at 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Steam is water vapor, usually created by using heat. To change water vapor back into liquid water, the condensation process is used.
condenser
Steam is a gas stage of water. You can produce steam by heating water to boiling point.
If the steam is superheated, then yes - it can be used to boil water. If the steam is at the saturation point however, the most you could achieve would be to heat the liquid water to the boiling point while condensing some of the steam.
It is called boiling point.
vaporization point of steam
The Steam and Vapor are the same thing i.e. Water in its gaseous state. However Steam is formed by Forced Boiling and is at a pressure greater then the atmospheric pressure as used in a Steam Engine. Water Vapour is free conversion of Water from Liquid to Gaseous Stage thru evaporation. It is in approximate equilibrium with atmospheric pressure Steam is formed by by raising the Temperature (giving heat energy) of water above its Boiling Point i.e. 100 deg Celsius whereas evaporation of water (from water bodies) may occur at temperature way below the boiling point i.e. 30 deg Celsius. Drying of washed clothes is an example
Steam is a gas stage of water. You can produce steam by heating water to boiling point.
at 100 degrees liquid water will go to steam and steam will go to liquid water
Steam is the gaseous form of water above its boiling point. When you see 'steam', that is not really steam, it's warm-water droplets in the air.
Steam is the gaseous form of water above its boiling point. When you see 'steam', that is not really steam, it's warm-water droplets in the air.
Steam
Steam results when water is heated beyond its boiling point - the liquid water is changing states, to gas. Steam is water turned to gas. ICE is frozen water.
If the steam is superheated, then yes - it can be used to boil water. If the steam is at the saturation point however, the most you could achieve would be to heat the liquid water to the boiling point while condensing some of the steam.
No, it turns into steam. Water turns into ice at its freezing point.
steam, which is a water form of a gas
Superheated steam is steam at a temperature higher than water's boiling point
H2O is a common phrase for water. H2O stands for 2 parts hydrogen and 1 part oxygen. Yes, steam is a part of water, when water reaches a boiling point and begins to evaporate, the result is steam.
At the boiling point, 100° C