these form in the sky when water vapour condenses into water droplets
water vapour go up into the clouds as a gas causing the clouds to get heavy thus releasing water droplets
Condensed water vapour in the air
CLOUDS
no
condensed droplets of water vapour
Condensation occurs in cold when water vapour condense to form tiny droplets of water.
Condensed water vapour in the air
water vapour go up into the clouds as a gas causing the clouds to get heavy thus releasing water droplets
CLOUDS
The air needs to be cooled, the amount depending on how much water vapour is in it. When it's cooled sufficiently the water vapour will condense on solid things as water, or become very small droplets (fog/cloud). When this happens in the early mornings we call it dew, and the temperature at which the water will condense is known as the dewpoint.
because its condensation. Heat evaporates the water and the cold surfaces condense the vapour back to liquid.
Warm airing making contact with a cold surface causes some of the water vapour in the air to condense into liquid water droplets.
If the water vapour comes in contact with a surface and is allowed to cool and condense, it will turn back to liquid. For example, if you were to boil a pot of water with a lid on top, the water vapour would rise, touch the underside of the pot lid and condense to form droplets (liquid).
No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.
Droplets of water will condense on a surface when the surface drops below the Dew Point temperature at that relative humidity.That is, the vapour condenses into a liquid phase. The droplet shape is caused by surface tension of the liquid.
no
No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.