water start condencing to ice at 0 degree centrigate
As long as the water is liquid, the strength of the finished product will not be diminished by the water temperature.
A water cycle is a sequence of stages that show the way water condenses and evaporates.
The condensation temperature is a characteristic of the gas that is different for ever gas or gas mixture. Atmospheric pressure and temperature differential also affects condensation temperature.
i think i know from my science teacher... Since Liquid, and solids sometimes
No, dew is liquid water and it forms when the air temperature drops sufficiently that the air can no longer hold all its water vapour. This must be above freezing point. Of course the same argument applies when the temperature does drop below zero, but then we get ice crystals instead of water drops, and we call it frost.
water vapor condenses to a liquid
Due point of water
Yes. There is latent heat release when vapor condenses.
The change is from gas to liquid: H2O in the gaseous form condenses into the liquid we know as water.
Energy is released.
Condensation
water is the substance
These reverse processes are both part of the water cycle
Water is liquid at temperatures between 0 and 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Below is solid and above is gaseous.
Gaseous
Actually when steam condenses it is loosing heat. As steam rises it cools and falls back down with gravity. I.E. a steam boiler heat system Boils water to till it turns into a gaseous mixture of water droplets and rises to a radiator to heat. As the radiator absorbs the heat from the steam It condenses and returns to the boiler through the same riser pipe to the boiler.
Yes. It is the temperature at which a gas condenses into a liquid.