The process of condesation
When someone exhales in cold weather, the warm air from their lungs meets the colder air, causing the water vapor in their breath to condense into tiny droplets. These droplets scatter the light, making the exhaled breath visible as a mist or cloud.
It condenses when it exits into the cool air
Condensation
here is a way to find out... breath in, then breath out... do you see anything?... no, the stuff you breath out is carbon dioxide.So the answer is yes... but when you can see your breath sometimes (usually in winter), that is because your breath is warm and the air is cold. Not because the cold makes carbon dioxide visible.
The water vapor in your exhaled breath condenses- it goes from very warm to very cold. The drop in temperature makes the VERY moist exhaled breath condense into water droplets. Those water droplets are visible, just as a cloud is visible.
Nobody makes isthmuses. They are naturally-occurring geological formations.
On a warm day, the air temperature is likely higher than your body temperature, so when you exhale, the warm air quickly mixes with the surrounding air and dissipates. This prevents the condensation of water vapor in your breath, which is what makes it visible on colder days.
It makes your density thicken.
Smog.
Nitrogen.
No, ultraviolet light is not visible to the human eye. It has a shorter wavelength than visible light, which makes it invisible.
it helps us breath and live