hot
Not exactly.The water that appears on the outside of the icy bottle is condensation of the water vapor in the air around the bottle. The cold temperature of the ice in the bottle causes the condensation. There are lots of water molecules in air -- there is more water in the air on a humid day then on a hot dry day, but there is always some water in the air. When air is cooled by coming in contact with the icy bottle, it condenses, and goes from being a gas to being a liquid (just like how steam turns back into water when it cools). It is the condensed water from the air that makes the outside of the bottle wet.If a cold bottle was in air that had no water vapor in it (unlikely except in a laboratory), then it would not get wet.
When a bottle is put into a freezer it gets cold. Air contains water vapor and this vapor is held within a certain temperature range. Thus, when the air touches the bottle it is cooled and condenses. Dew is formed in the same manner.
you breathe out water vapor
Water vapor condenses in a cold condenser tube.
It doesn't. A hurricane gains strength from warm ocean water. Warm water produces large amounts of water vapor, which is essentially the fuel of a hurricane. Cold water and land do not provide as much water vapor, so a hurricane will weaken if it encounters either of those.
This is due to condensation. The cold surface of the bottle condenses the water vapor in the air (humidity) into liquid water.
condensation, water vapor from the air condenses into a liquid when it comes in contact with the cold bottle and moves down to the bottom
Condensation - The surface of the bottle and the air just above it will be cool enough to allow condensation of the water vapor in the air onto the bottle's surface.
When water vapor gets cold it condenses into condensation.
The dew point is the temperature at which vapor in the air will condense and turn into liquid. The dew point is determined by the air temperature, pressure and relative humidity. Consequently, when vapor in the air comes into contact with the edge of the bottle (which, if the water is cold, is below dew point) it condenses and forms liquid on the outside of the bottle.
Not exactly.The water that appears on the outside of the icy bottle is condensation of the water vapor in the air around the bottle. The cold temperature of the ice in the bottle causes the condensation. There are lots of water molecules in air -- there is more water in the air on a humid day then on a hot dry day, but there is always some water in the air. When air is cooled by coming in contact with the icy bottle, it condenses, and goes from being a gas to being a liquid (just like how steam turns back into water when it cools). It is the condensed water from the air that makes the outside of the bottle wet.If a cold bottle was in air that had no water vapor in it (unlikely except in a laboratory), then it would not get wet.
When a bottle is put into a freezer it gets cold. Air contains water vapor and this vapor is held within a certain temperature range. Thus, when the air touches the bottle it is cooled and condenses. Dew is formed in the same manner.
Water vapor in the air searches and sticks to cold areas. Therefore, a lot of water vapor grouping together will form water.
nothing "happens" 2 the water vapor. the vast amount of water vapor in the air on a humid day as exactly bcoz its so hot. the water is drawn out of sources which holds it. but when its cold that water isn't drawn out
submerge the bottle in cold water.
you breathe out water vapor
When you breathe out, the warm air from your lungs contains a good bit of water vapor. When it hits a cold surface (such as a cold car window, in this case) the water vapor condenses out of vapor form and forms a liquid.