This physical process is called liquefaction and occur under the boiling point. Thie depends on the pressure.
Vapor into liquid is condensation.
Condensation
When water vapor changes into tiny drops of water, it is called condensation. This process occurs when the air cools down and cannot hold as much moisture, leading the water vapor to transform into liquid water droplets.
Changing water vapor into tiny drops of water is known as condensation. This process occurs when the temperature of the air cools, causing the water vapor to lose energy and form liquid water droplets. Condensation is a key step in the water cycle.
These particles are molecules of gaseous water.
When cooled enough, water vapor condenses into tiny water droplets. This process occurs as the temperature drops, causing the water vapor molecules to lose energy and come together to form liquid droplets. This phenomenon is commonly observed in the formation of clouds or dew.
It depends because water and liquid has tiny tiny drops that can be 50 degrees or drops that can be 90 degrees. You only feel the average of the water or liquid. Room temperature is colder and hotter depending on the average liquids and tiny tiny drops
Condensed water vapor is water vapor that has cooled and changed back into a liquid state. This can happen when the temperature drops and the water vapor loses energy, causing it to condense into tiny droplets or ice crystals. This process is what forms clouds, fog, and dew.
Tiny drops of water can come from condensation, which occurs when warm and moist air cools down and can no longer hold all the water vapor it contains. This excess water vapor then forms into tiny droplets that we see as water droplets. They can also come from processes like misting, spraying, or atomizing liquids.
Tiny drops of liquid suspended in the air are typically from condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere. This can happen due to processes like evaporation, cooling of air, or mixing of air masses with different temperatures and humidity levels. These suspended liquid droplets can form clouds, fog, mist, or precipitation depending on the conditions.
The water in clouds is in the form of liquid droplets. Clouds are made up of tiny water droplets that have condensed from water vapor in the air. If the temperature drops low enough, these liquid water droplets can freeze and turn into ice crystals.
When a surface is far above the liquid's boiling point and the liquid is dropped onto it, the part of the liquid which first contacts the surface flashes into vapor. The vapor forms a layer under the liquid. The liquid is "shattered" into drops by the force of the suddenly expanding and escaping vapor and by the liquid's surface tension. The vapor is a poor heat conductor which then protects the drops riding on top of it. This is called the "Leidenfrost effect".