When steam is a liquid or goes into a liquid state via condensation, then it is no longer deemed as gas or steam. Thus it is called liquid.
It is called CONDENSATION.
Steam doesn't cool off liquids because it is the release of thermal energy from the water, and that is why, it is therefore hot. If the steam is coming off the liquid itself, it is heat being released by the liquid, but the liquid is not necessarily getting cooler. Think of water boiling on a stove. There may be plenty of steam coming off the water, but the water continues to boil. Subjecting a cool liquid to steam will certainly not cool the liquid.
The term we use for H2O when it's a liquid is water. The solid form is ice, and in the form of a gas, it's called steam.
water is a liquid, steam is a gas
Steam. Not to be confused with vapor, which is a suspension of liquid water molecules in another gas.
its called evaporation
condensation
it becomes a GAS/VAPOUR but it is still called steam, because it has changed from liquid form (water) to gas/vapour form (steam), lol. grimbo
evaporation
It is called CONDENSATION.
When a gas turns to a liquid, this transformation is called condensation. Condensation.
Vaporization is the term for changing a liquid into a gas. This is usually done by heating the liquid, which is why boiling water vaporizes into steam.
Gaseous water is called steam.
The tree phases of a matter are called Solid, liquid and gas. For example, water is present in the form of Ice, liquid water and water-vapour or steam.
at 100 degrees liquid water will go to steam and steam will go to liquid water
There is no name for it, the substance is either a liquid or a gas ( like water or steam), there is no inbetween, the process of turning a liquid into a gas is called evaporation and the process of turning a gas into a liquid is called condesation.
water is a liquid but water vapours is steam... when we boil water it will turn into steam which is called water vapours...