The liquid that condenses on glass when you breathe on it is water. The water is a condensate, and the cooler glass causes water in air we exhale to cool and condense.
Solid (ice) Liquid (as you know it: fluid water) Gas (vapour; you can't see or smell it, but condenses when blowing breath against a cold window glass)
Condensation. A gas condenses into a liquid.
condenses
As the liquid inside the glass tumbler is cold it condenses the water vapour in the atmosphere. This explains why tiny droplets of water are found on the outer surface of the glass tumbler.
Yes.
Glass is usually cooler than your breath. Breath contains moisture that condenses on the glass.
Water vapor in your breath condenses as tiny droplets of liquid water on the cold glass surface.
It condenses, this is what happens when the particles in a gas cool down. If you breath onto a piece of glass you can see a small amount of condensation
the water molecules in your breath condenses as moisture on the glass.
Because the air can pass through the cloth. When you blow on glass it condenses.
Solid (ice) Liquid (as you know it: fluid water) Gas (vapour; you can't see or smell it, but condenses when blowing breath against a cold window glass)
The change is from gas to liquid: H2O in the gaseous form condenses into the liquid we know as water.
The moisture from your breath condenses. It condenses and evaporate due to the drop in temperature, in comparison with your body.
Condensation
The boiling point of the liquid to which the gas condenses at the pressure under which the gas condenses.
Condensation. It is the same process that causes moisture on the outside of a cold drink. Since your breath is warmer than the outside air, some of the moisture in your breath condenses in the cold air and forms molecules of liquid water and ice.
Condensation. Condensation is when a gas condenses and becomes a liquid. e.g. When water vapour becomes rain it CONDENSES