distillation
Boiling Bleach Filtration Distillation
The best method for purifying water depends on the situation. Chemical purifiers are effective for killing bacteria and viruses, filter systems can remove larger particles, solar stills can remove contaminants through evaporation and condensation, and boiling can kill harmful microorganisms. It is recommended to use a combination of methods for thorough water purification.
Vaporization
Boiling is the process where a liquid turns into vapor by absorbing heat, typically occurring at the boiling point. Condensation is the opposite process where vapor turns into a liquid by releasing heat, happening when the vapor cools below its saturation point. Boiling requires input of energy, while condensation releases energy.
"Condensation boiling" is not a recognized scientific term. Condensation typically refers to the phase change of a gas to a liquid, whereas boiling refers to the phase change of a liquid to a gas. If you are referring to a specific concept or process, please provide more information.
It can be called either boiling or evaporation.
CONDENSATION
The boiling point. The process is condensation, but condensation and boiling occur at the same temperature since the boiling point represents the temperature at which gas and liquid are in equilibrium with each other.
For boiling energy is needed, so it's endothermic.
Condensation is the transformation of a gas in a liquid.
There is nothing called "condensation point". At least not such thing related to do condensation of gases. But there is a fixed point at a certain pressure, called "boiling point", means, the temperature at which a liquid boils. But condensation does not occur at a fixed temperature like boiling. Think this way, you can see water drops on a cold bottle that occur by condensation of water vapor in the air. For this, just a cold bottle is enough, not a bottle at a certain temperature.
These changes are boiling and condensation.