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Water drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing, fall as SNOW . Water drops that fall when the temperature is above freezing fall as RAIN .
the temperature drops rapidly :)
Depending on the temperature, water drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing can become sleet, ice, or snow.
once it drops below the freezing point, it solidifies
As the temperature drops the vapor pressure of water also decreases and the molecular movement of water decreases. Once the temperature drops enough the molecular movements may even be slow enough for water to become a solid that we know as ice
It becomes solid water.
you die
Nope. If you turn the heat off so the temperature drops below 100C, you will have non-boiling water. When the steam's temperature drops below the vaporization temperature it will return to liquid state.
frost
u are a hobo
Every liquid, with the single exception of liquid helium, will eventually freeze if it gets cold enough. Helium, however, does not freeze.
frozen dew
Liquid's viscocity depends on temperature. As a rule, viscosity drops with the increase of temperature.
Water drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing, fall as SNOW . Water drops that fall when the temperature is above freezing fall as RAIN .
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.
It drops.
Yes it does, when its temperature drops below 32° F. If it's still in the pipes when that happens, that can be a real problem.