If it happens in a cloud, the drops combine until too heavy, and it rains.
when vapour condenses
no
because mirrors are cold
these form in the sky when water vapour condenses into water droplets
somehow
The surface of the mirror is cooler than the surroundings. When the water vapour comes into contact with the surface of the mirror, they condense.
I don't think you can condense a liquid, you can evaporate a liquid eg water which turnns into water vapour then when the water vapour gets colder it cools and condenses
A condenser
If the water vapour comes in contact with a surface and is allowed to cool and condense, it will turn back to liquid. For example, if you were to boil a pot of water with a lid on top, the water vapour would rise, touch the underside of the pot lid and condense to form droplets (liquid).
It is reversible . Water vapour can condense and become liquid. Evaporation and condensation are phases in the water cycle
False, Dew Point is where water vapour begins to condense into a liquid
The temperature decreases as the gas (vapour) turns back into a liquid. For instance, the hot water vapour from a kettle can be cooled so as to condense back into water.
no
Water vapour is like air so if you condense it (cool it down) then it will turn into water (a liquid). I hope this helped! By: Suzie
You can condense a liquid by putting in heat.
The Separation of Waters. There was as yet no liquid water, it was in the form of vapour and God caused this vapour to condense which formed oceans and cleared the sky (see Genesis chapter 1)
This is the simplest vapour-liquid separation device for gaseous mixtures. It can only be used when the boiling points of the substances are so different that essentially only one of them will condense into a liquid under suitable conditions. This is the simplest vapour-liquid separation device for gaseous mixtures. It can only be used when the boiling points of the substances are so different that essentially only one of them will condense into a liquid under suitable conditions.
Evaporation. Boil the saltwater, and collect the vapour. Condense it back to liquid - and the salt solids will be left behind in the original container.