When water vapor condenses back to liquid water, it lets go of internal structural energy in order to revert back to liquid state. THe energy released is Lantent heat of condensation.
no when a substance is condensed it requires latent heat of fusion
Yes: The reduction of entropy in the condensing substance is released as heat to the environment.
obviously yes
Condensation releases energy rather than absorbing it, this is the latent heat of the change of state from liquid to gas and vice versa
Condensation releases energy rather than absorbing it, this is the latent heat of the change of state from liquid to gas and vice versa
No, latent heat can never be zero.Because latent heat is the hidden heat so there has to be heat more than zero.
latent heat :)
what is latent heat
1. Process that release "Latent Heat" : a. Freezing, b. Condensation, - (Greatest amount of released Latent Heat.) c. Deposition. 2. Process that absorbs "Latent Heat" : a. Melting, b. Evaporation, - (Greatest amount of absorbed Latent Heat.) c. sublimation.
condensation
Sort of. Actually it is the condensation of water vapor into liquid water (a drop of rain or a particle of cloud mist) that releases the latent heat (into the surrounding air). So strictly clouds and rain do not release latent heat.
The latent heat of condensation.
Latent heat of condensation.
Condensation releases energy rather than absorbing it, this is the latent heat of the change of state from liquid to gas and vice versa
Condensation releases energy rather than absorbing it, this is the latent heat of the change of state from liquid to gas and vice versa
L can either mean the latent heat of vaporization or condensation. The latent heat of vaporization is the energy required to completely turn 1 kilogram of a liquid into a gas at its boiling point. The latent heat of condensation is the energy required to completely turn 1 kilogram of a solid into a liquid at its melting point.
Because as things condense they give up their latent heat.
Why are Condensation and Evaporation opposite?Condensation is the process of changing water vapor to liquid or water due to the "Releasing of Heat", while Evaporation is the changing of water to water vapor due to the "Absorption of Heat"Or, in short:Condensation = releasing of heatEvaporation = absorption of heatSo that is why they are different or opposite
At saturation, latent heat of condensation is released into the air.
Not really, although condensation does release latent heat. Crystallization of snow flakes around nuclei isn't so much involved in this process.