If you look carefully at a boiling kettle, water vapour is the white vapour you can see. Steam is actually the invisible short section between the spout of the kettle and the start of the water vapour.
eat frogs and leaves
the difference is that water vapour is just one particle that joins together with more and more to form steam
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
The process when water changes into a gas is called evaporation. Evaporation occurs for pure water at 100 degrees celsius (-173 K) when water molecules begin to move around very rapidly and split up.
A binary vapour cycle is a representation of a mercury cycle and a steam cycle on a same scale.In this vapour cycle there is comparison between the mercury cycle and steam cycle. In mercury cycle there occurs isothermal expansion of saturated water from boiler into dry saturated steam followed by isentropic expansion followed by condensation of steam and at last heating of steam and thus mercury has completed the cycle in 4 way process. In steam cycle first ther is isothermal expansion which results in converting of saturated water into dry saturated steam followed by superheated process where the steam is superheated followed by isentropic expansion of superheated steam followed by condensation of exhaust steam and at last heating of steam thus completing the cycle.
When water is in the vapour form of steam, it is in a gaseous state.
yes
the difference is that water vapour is just one particle that joins together with more and more to form steam
mist steam are the condensed water vapour and we can see them but we cant see the water vapours
eat frogs and leaves
Actually, the steam part is not actually steam, but water vapour. If you look closely at a boiling kettle, there is a clear space between the spout and the actual (steam). That clear space is the steam, which is invisible. What appears afterwards is water vapour.
None, except the plural in (vapour)s
Steam is water vapour - just a very hot form of it.
Just evaporate water, and the vapour is steam.
No. Steam is a form of water vapour.
Water vapour is water in it's gas form. It's invisible, 'dissolved' into the air. Steam is where the hot water vapour has condensed out of the air, it's a lot of small water droplets mixed in with the air.
Steam
Steam