because a chicken attacked it
No, steam and water vapor are actually the same substance, which is gaseous water. However, steam is typically used to refer to water vapor that is hot and at a high temperature, while water vapor can be at any temperature.
If they speed up fast enough, they turn to steam (water vapor).
The bubbles in boiling water are steam or vaporized water. The bubbles initially do not reach the surface of the billing fluid as the colder water away from the hot bottom cools the steam turning it back to liquid. WHen all the water is at 100oC the bubbles reach the top.
Steam is formed when water is heated to its boiling point and changes from a liquid to a gas. The steam rises above the hot water because it is less dense than air and is buoyant, creating a visible cloud of water vapor.
The water that has been heated to a gas is called water vapor or steam. This occurs when water reaches its boiling point and changes from a liquid to a gas state.
Steam is not a solution; steam is water vapor.
Steam car wash using a high pressure steam machine to clean an engine.Steam Cleaners and Steam Vapor Cleaners are an environmentally safe cleaning system utilizing tap water, heat and pressure to make hotter steam vapor. A safe, chemical free, cleaning and sanitizing cleaning system.
Yes, but that stuff you can see isn't steam. Neither steam nor water vapor are visible. The could of white stuff you can see above a boiling kettle is water droplets formed by the condensation of the water vapor/steam as it collides with the cooler air outside the kettle.
Steam. Not to be confused with vapor, which is a suspension of liquid water molecules in another gas.
So specifically steam will form when you boil water. While water vapor forms when the sun evaporates water. Steam you would most likely see, while water vapor is more of an invisible gas.
Yes water vapor is steam. It is formed when water heats up to 100 degrees Celsius.
because steam is boiling water is hot it turns into a gas therefore you get steam