The question cannot really be answered without knowing what you mean by 'powerful'.
Water condenses from a gaseous to a liquid form at 100 degrees Celsius.
Gaseous water is called steam.
The process that takes water from gaseous form to liquid form is called condensation. This happens when water vapor in the air cools down and turns back into liquid water droplets.
The gaseous form of water is called water vapor. It is formed when liquid water evaporates into the air.
Water vapor is an atomized liquid, appearing in gaseous form.
The gaseous form of a substance that exists as a liquid at room temperature is known as vapor.
I think what you are looking for is, ice, water, steam?
When water turns into a gaseous form, it is considered water vapor, when it is in a liquid form it is water, and when it is in a solid form it is ice.
Yes it can, the only difference between liquid and gaseous water is it's physical form, not it's chemical composition.
Water can exist in a solid state as ice, a liquid state as water, and a gaseous state as water vapor.
You can identify the different phases of water in its solid form as ice, liquid form as water, and gaseous form as water vapor.
Water exists in liquid, (water); solid, (ice); and gaseous (steam) form.