It really depends on the temperature of the steam and temperature of the cold surface. 250 degree steam hitting a 50 or 60 degree surface will just turn back into water and droplets can be seen almost immediately. 1000+ degree steam hitting a frozen surface may cause a loud bang and eventually turn back into water.
When steam hits a cold surface, it condenses back into water due to the rapid cooling effect. This transition releases heat energy, which warms up the cold surface.
The steam (water vapour) condenses into droplets of water to form a mist.
If enough heat is absorbed,steam become condensed and become liquid water
When steam cools it condenses back to water.
it beings to freeze
its tempurature goes down beb x
Gas changing into liquid is called condensation. This usually happens when the gas loses heat energy and transitions into a liquid state. An example of this is when water vapor in the air condenses into liquid water droplets on a cold surface.
A steam distillation sloping splash head is a glassware attachment used in steam distillation setups. It is placed on top of the distillation flask to prevent carry-over of boiling liquid into the condenser. As the vapor rises, it hits the sloping surface, condenses, and falls back into the flask, ensuring that only vaporized compounds are carried into the condenser for distillation.
When light hits an unpainted wooden door, it is mostly absorbed by the wood's surface and converted into heat energy. Some light may be reflected off the surface of the door, causing the door to appear a certain color depending on the wood's natural shade and grain.
Because when it hits the cold tray it starts to set hard
when it is changing into gas... bubbles. It is boiling when bubbles begin breaking the surface. the water o nthe bottom is being heated it mixes when it rises because of convection currents. after the water is almost 100 C the water that gets hot enough evaporates and comes out as water vapor. The bubbles are full of steam which gets released when the bubble hits the surface.
When steam hits a cold object like a plate, it loses heat rapidly, causing it to condense back into water. This process releases latent heat, warming up the plate. Convection currents may also form, carrying the heat away from the steam and facilitating the cooling process.
when light hits a rough surface it scattters.
Sunlight that hits the Earth's surface is absorbed by the Earth. It is then reflected back.
When sound hits a surface, it can be reflected, absorbed, or transmitted. The type of interaction depends on the material and texture of the surface. Sound waves can bounce off smooth surfaces like mirrors, be absorbed by soft materials like curtains, or pass through thin surfaces like paper.
steam hits a cold surface makes a liquid. also known as condensation
im assuming that u meant "what happens when LIGHT hits a black surface?" the reason for this is that the black surface ABSORBS the light, and so none of the light waves can be reflected back (which is what makes it look black)
Fog.It makes fog.
When radiation hits Earth's surface, it can be absorbed, reflected, or scattered. Some of the absorbed radiation warms the surface, causing temperatures to increase, while some is re-radiated back into the atmosphere as heat. The remaining radiation is reflected back into space, contributing to Earth's energy balance.
When a cold front hits, usually the warm air rises.
It is reflected at the same angle to the normal. The normal is a line perpendicular to the surface.
The sunlight will be absorbed by the surface.If the surface is a mirror,lesser light will be absorbed.More will be reflected. If the surface is black,more light will be absorbed.
Steam is created when the cold air hits warm breath.The reaction of the warm breath hitting the cold air creates steam. Steam is water in vapor form.