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Clouds the stuff that comes out of a boiling kettle Your own breath in very cold weather the stuff that comes out of cooling towers in a nuclear power plant Geysers Gaseous state of most liquids
Glucose comes from sugar in food. Oxygen comes from air we breath in. Water comes from water we drink. Carbon dioxide comes from gas we breath out. Enery comes from glucose absorbed in the small intestine.
Water (H2O) comes in three different physical states; liquid, solid and gas. Water vapor is water in a gaseous state. Water vapor can be produced from the evaporation or boiling of liquid water or through the sublimation of ice. Typically water vapor is constantly being created by evaporation. Unlike the solid or liquid state of water, water vapor is not visible to the human eye.
Most water vapor in the Atmosphere comes from Evaporation from lakes, oceans, and rivers (larger bodies of water). However, water vapor can also come from evaporation from the leaves of plants (transpiration) and even from animals. If you have ever been sweating in a hot and dry climate area, you have contributed to the total amount of water vapor in the area.
Dihydrogen Monoxide.
Because you have water vapor on your mouth when you breath it out the water vapor turns to water like how rain comes
That is the water vapor from our breath, that condenses to water droplets. Water vapor by itself is invisible - it becomes visible when it forms droplets.
water vapor
water vapor
water vapor comes from the ocean water when it goes through evaporation.
Water Vapor
Yes, it does. Simply get close to a mirror or cold window and breathe on it and you will see the water vapor condense into water.
I would guess it would be a compound because your breath is basically water vapor and water is a compound (H2O)
Water vapor in your breath condenses when it contacts cold air. (It looks like steam.)
It's the water vapor in your breath, after it becomes liquid water. Warmer air is able to hold more water vapor than cooler air. When you breathe onto a cold surface, the air in your breath is cooled, and it can't then hold as much water vapor as it did when it was warm. So some of the vapor condenses out ... becomes water instead of vapor ... and the condensed water collects on the glass. Exactly the same process is responsible when you exhale into cold air and you "see your breath".
When you breath out the water in your breath condenses (freezes) allowing you to see the ice particles
Water comes as rain, then soaks into the ground, and then it gets heated up by the sun and becomes water vapor