The water will condense forming dew.
Water freezing in bottle when opened happens in the case of supercooled water. This water has been cooled below freezing point without being crystallized.
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you would need water
The dew point is the temperature at which water will condense out of the air. If the dew point were above the temperature, that would mean that some of the water vapor in the air should have already condensed out. In such a situation, the excess water WOULD condense out, lowering the amount of water vapor and consequently the dew point.
I know it sounds a little stupid, but supercooling is when water remains a liquid while it is below freezing point. Note, only some waters can do this.
The process is called condensation. It occurs when the water is cooled below its boiling point due to the temperature in the environment cooling it.
Condensation happens when air is cooled below a temperature called its 'dew point' which is the temperature at which the humidity is 100%. Air is capable of absorbing more water vapour when it is hotter. Therefore if warm air with water vapour in it is cooled, the humidity rises, until at the dew point the humidity is 100%. If it is cooled further, some of the water vapour appears as liquid water, which we call condensation. A typical example of condensation is fog, which happens when warm, moist air arrives over cooler ground, and it gives up its water vapour as floating droplets.
When air high above the Earth's surface is cooled below the dew point, it is likely to form clouds. Clouds are visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals made of water.
Water freezing in bottle when opened happens in the case of supercooled water. This water has been cooled below freezing point without being crystallized.
Dew, which is the condensation of water droplets on the ground.
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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.
Because it has a lower freezing point than water. It can be cooled to below zero Celsius and remain in liquid form - making it a more effective coolant than plain water.
Technically, the freezing point of water is at 0oC. Water is most dense at 5oC, then if cooled further it would be solid at 0oC.
you would need water
super-cooled
The dew point is the temperature at which water will condense out of the air. If the dew point were above the temperature, that would mean that some of the water vapor in the air should have already condensed out. In such a situation, the excess water WOULD condense out, lowering the amount of water vapor and consequently the dew point.