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On its own, no. Water is not a component of sand. If the sand is wet, then the water there can become water vapor, but that's true of water anywhere.
Gas
Condensation. The water vapor goes up into the sky forming clouds. When the clouds become too heavy with vapor, the water falls back down to earth as precipitation.
Intermolecular forces, i.e. hydrogen-bonds, have to be broken down in order for water molecules to escape to the vapor phase. Energy is needed in the process to set water molecules free.
Water vapor is totally invisible. If you see a cloud, fog, or mist, these are all liquid water, not water vapor.Water vapor is extremely important to the weather and climate. Without it, there would be no clouds or rain or snow, since all of these require water vapor in order to form. All of the water vapor that evaporates from the surface of the Earth eventually returns as precipitation - rain or snow.When liquid water is evaporated to form water vapor, heat is absorbed. This helps to cool the surface of the Earth. This "latent heat of condensation" is released again when the water vapor condenses to form cloud water. This source of heat helps drive the updrafts in clouds and precipitation systems, which then causes even more water vapor to condense into cloud, and more cloud water and ice to form precipitation.
when water evaporates it condenses and becomes water vapor:)
(evaporation) water becomes vapor, (condensation)vapor is still vapor, (precipitation) vapor becomes water again...
Actually its water vapor instead of vapor water. Anyways, the water has to have enough heat to become so hot that it doesn't boil but turns to steam and rises becoming water vapor.
water vapor is a gas its self
water
the water vapor turns to liquid
vapor
It dissapears
my mom
When the temperature drops the less water vapor in the air
steam
Yes