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There are a great many things that gain and lose heat. Metals for example gain and lose heat much more quickly than gasses.
When gases lose heat, they cool down and their particles slow down, eventually losing enough energy to change into liquid form through a process called condensation. This transition occurs when the temperature of the gas decreases to its condensation point, causing the gas molecules to come closer together and form a liquid.
You lose heat.
You lose heat.
When gases lose heat, they usually contract and their molecules move slower, which may lead to condensation if the temperature drops below the gas's dew point temperature. However, this does not always result in the gas fully condensing into a liquid; it depends on factors such as pressure and the specific gas involved.
The change in temperature is a decrease. Heat flowing out of an object causes its particles to lose kinetic energy, resulting in a decrease in temperature.
When gases lose heat they condensate into liquids.
They usually lose heat by panting.
with no green house gasses in the atmosphere the Earth would lose essentially all of its heat it receives from the sun and it would freeze. With too much you get an Earth that is arid and the seas would evaporate and we become Venus, which is nearer to us than Mars and is suffocated in carbon dioxide, methan and sulfuric acid
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.
The change of state from gas to liquid (condensation) or from liquid to solid (freezing) requires matter to lose heat energy in order to transition to a more ordered state. Heat energy must be removed to allow the particles to slow down and come closer together, changing their arrangement.
A good conductor of heat will transfer heat quickly because it allows heat to flow easily from one point to another. This means that when heat is applied, the conductor will quickly distribute it across its surface, allowing it to lose heat faster compared to a poor conductor.