The boiling point of the liquid to which the gas condenses at the pressure under which the gas condenses.
When a gas cools the distance between the particles shrinks, if a gas is cooled to a temperature below its boiling/Condensing point it condenses into a liquid, if it is cooled bellow its Melting/freezing point it because a solid A common example of this is water which above the temperature 100 is a gas, between 0 and 100 is a liquid and below 0 is a solid.
the gas condenses to become liquid in the solid container
Each gas condenses at a different temp. as for water vapor it condenses at 212F or 100C
Yes. It is the temperature at which a gas condenses into a liquid.
volume decreases until the gas condenses to a liquid,
A gas condenses into liquid phase if its cooled below its critical temperatureand pressurized. If pressure is above the gas triple point pressure, coolingis enough to condense the gas to liquid phase.A gas below its critical temperature is called a vapour.
Yes. It is the temperature at which a gas condenses into a liquid.
it condenses
Balloons are filled with gas and gas expands when temperature increases. Gas also condenses when the temperature is lowered. This is due to Charles' law.
a gas when condenses, it turns to a liquid. and also a liquid when condenses, it turns to a liquid. okay, we can take an example of domestic gas cylinders, it will in the form of compressed liquid and it condenses to gas when we use due to the changes in the atmospheric temperature. it will be at low pressure as a liquid and condenses to gas.
The temperature at which it turns into a gas (usually the temperature when the liquid phase "bubbles" and vaporizes) also the temperature where the gas phase condenses to a liquid.
Dew Point: Is the temperature at which gas condenses into a liquid.
When a gas cools the distance between the particles shrinks, if a gas is cooled to a temperature below its boiling/Condensing point it condenses into a liquid, if it is cooled bellow its Melting/freezing point it because a solid A common example of this is water which above the temperature 100 is a gas, between 0 and 100 is a liquid and below 0 is a solid.
the gas condenses to become liquid in the solid container
Water vapours that condenses on a surface having temperature below 0 0C are converted into ice which is often known frost.
Each gas condenses at a different temp. as for water vapor it condenses at 212F or 100C
it depends on what type of gas you're talking about, and what the current gas pressure is: see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condensation Depends on the type of gas and pressure