Water vapour falls below the dew point (and comes out of solution in air).
-Anonymous Quo
The higher the temp, the higher the evaporation rate.
Every element has a temperature where it changes or starts to change from a solid or liquid to a gas. Carbon sublimates from the solid form. Condensation works in the reverse manner.
It varies for the condensing vapor and humidity. Condensation occurs when a vapor is cooled to its dewpoint. See "dew point" for more information. It is not necessarily a difference in temperature, since it changes based on humidity and air temperature.
Evaporation occurs on a cold surface. Once this happens the particles get enery from the heat and can move about more freely. After a while they start to loose this energy and thay turn back into a liquid. condensation is what the end part is . the beginning part is called evaporation.
Evaporation is when the sun heats up a liquid to where the individual molecules become more excited and start to spread, which creates a gas. Condensation is when the gas begins to cool down again, to where the molecules start to regroup into a liquid.
Yes because the sun is very strong near the equator which means more evaporation happens. The more evaporation the more condensation. AKA the water cycle.
there are groundwater, precipitaiton, condensation, evaporation, runoff, collection and more
The difference is the evaporation heat (or the 'equal' condensation heat)
Yes it does, and this does not only apply to moisture. Most none liquids such as iron, plastics even glass will break down if given enough time. Fuel such as petrol will evaporate very quickly. When you smell petrol you are really smelling evaporating petrol.
At temperatures below the dew point there is less evaporation than condensation. Drops and droplets condense and grow. At temperatures above the dew point there is more evaporation than condensation, drops and droplets evaporate.
Yes. Air has a dew point. This is when water in the air will condense into a liquid form. When the air reaches that temperature at night the water condenses and in the morning that water is still there on the grass. This is dew.
The molecules slow down due to a decrease in temperature, which means particles are packed more closely together, causing the water vapour to turn to liquid water. The particles in the water vapour are attracted to each other, condensing water vapour to turn to liquid water. Hope this helps :D!!