Want this question answered?
Nuclear is the answer
Chemical reaction.
Condensation is the opposite of vaporization. When you sweat you are cooling your body off; therefore condensation is a warming process. Or Evaporation A+
Temperature deviation among the steam and surface temperature on the bathroom mirrow causing condensation.
It depends on how big the steam is. If the steam is as small as water vapour, it cannot be seen by the naked eye. If the steam is as big as water droplets, it can be seen by naked eye. But if many steam, it always can be seen by naked eye.
Condensation.
No, superheated steam gives off little energy. Most of the heat given off by steam is the latent heat of condensation as it undergoes a phase change from vapor to liquid. Superheated steam could first be "desuperheated" by adding water until it reaches the saturation point, then used for heat transfer processes.
It occurs when a gas changes into a liquid. Heat is given off.
Saturated steam is gas-phase water that is at its condensation threshhold. That means that if the temperature is lowered or the pressure is increased, you will see condensation. An example of this would be boil-off steam in a pot: as soon as it hits the cooler surface of the pot lid, it condenses again. This constrasts with superheated steam, which is above the saturation point due to being heated to hotter than the boiling temperature at the given pressure.
Steam is water molecules in vapor form
Water and carbon dioxide are given off.
Oxygen is given off during photosynthesis.It is during the aerobic cellular respiration of the leaf cells that carbon dioxide is given off.
When a kettle boils, some of the water inside goes from the liquid state to the gaseous state and rises because it's hot. What you see on your cupboard is called condensation which happens when a gas is cooled, such as steam (gaseous water), and goes back to the liquid state, hence why you have liquid water up there.
Nuclear is the answer
yes it can on short trips :a car needs at least an hour running to burn off the condensation in crankcase alone
Oxygen
photosynthesis