it condences on that object
it is already liquid if it is cooler water
I think as it gets cooler it can hold less water vapor....
Yes, water vapor can condense onto a cooler water droplet because condensation occurs when water vapor loses heat energy and changes back into liquid form upon contacting a cooler surface. This process can be observed in the formation of clouds or fog when water droplets in the air cool down and collect water vapor.
When water vapor touches a mirror, it condenses into liquid water due to the temperature difference between the vapor and the mirror surface. This condensation creates a thin film of water droplets on the mirror's surface, causing it to appear foggy or misty.
The process that changes water vapor into clouds of fog is called condensation. When warm, moist air comes into contact with cooler air or a cooler surface, the water vapor in the air condenses into tiny water droplets, forming fog.
It may condense into clouds, or into precipitation, because cooler air cannot hold as much water vapor as warmer air.
The Surface of the glass is cold. When hotter water vapor touches it, it condenses to form water(Vapor = 100 degree C) You Dont Know This?? I mean I'm 13!
When the atmosphere is cooler than the geosphere, the process of condensation occurs. This is when water vapor in the air changes into liquid water as it comes into contact with cooler surfaces.
Air's ability to hold water vapor increases as temperature increases. Warmer air can hold more water vapor compared to cooler air.
This could be steam if you are heating water. Or fog when warm air crosses cooler ground or cool air crosses warmer ground.steam
Evaporation is faster at a higher temperature.
When water is boiled, it evaporates and forms steam. When the steam comes into contact with a cooler lid, it condenses back into liquid water droplets due to the drop in temperature. This is similar to how dew forms on cool surfaces in the morning.