temperature
During condensation, heat energy is removed from a gas to change it into a liquid. Temperature remains constant during this phase change as the heat energy is used to break the intermolecular bonds and overcome the forces holding the gas molecules together.
Condensation releases energy as it changes from a gas to a liquid, usually in the form of heat. This process is called the latent heat of condensation.
Condensation is exothermic. Energy is released during condensation. Energy can not be "lost" but merely change from one form to another.
Condensation is a phase change process that releases energy in the form of heat when water vapor transforms into liquid water. This energy is known as latent heat of condensation.
The amount of energy needed to change a given mass of ice to water at constant temperature is called the heat of fusion. This is the heat energy required to change a solid to a liquid at its melting point.
Condensation is a phase change process where a substance goes from a gas to a liquid state, releasing thermal energy in the form of heat. This type of energy transfer is known as heat of condensation.
Heat of transformation is the amount of heat absorbed or released during a phase change of a substance, such as melting, freezing, vaporization, or condensation. It is the energy required to change the state of a substance without changing its temperature.
The energy absorbed and stored in vaporous molecules is referred to as latent heat. This represents the energy required to change the state of a substance without a change in temperature, such as during the process of evaporation or condensation.
Objects change temperature through the transfer of heat energy. This can occur through conduction, convection, or radiation. When an object gains heat energy, its temperature increases, and when it loses heat energy, its temperature decreases.
"Latent heat" refers to the heat energy absorbed or released during a change of state without a change in temperature. For example, when ice melts into water, heat is absorbed from the surroundings without a rise in temperature, which is the latent heat of fusion. Similarly, when water vapor condenses into liquid water, heat is released without a decrease in temperature, known as the latent heat of condensation.
The heat of vaporization and heat of condensation are directly related and have the same magnitude but opposite signs. The heat of vaporization is the energy required to change a substance from liquid to vapor, while the heat of condensation is the energy released when a substance changes from vapor to liquid.
Heat is needed for matter to change form eg: Melting, condensation, etc.