Most air has humidity. When there is humidity, then there is a dew point - a temperature - below which the humidity condenses into water droplets. If you are in an air-conditioned space (at equilibrium), your glasses are cool. You walk into a warmer zone - one which has a dew point above the temperature of your glasses - and you get condensation.
the water droplets indicate that the air is cooler on one side of the glass. If the droplets are inside, then the outside is cooler. If the droplets are outside, it means the inside is cooler.
rain
Yes you should spray water every 2-8 hours so they can drink water droplets from plant(s)-walls.
The water droplets themselves are just water droplets, precipitates, runoff.They got there through condensation, the change of a gas state back to a liquid state, and the reverse of vaporization.
yes.
Fog and dew also consist of water droplets. You will also notice water condensing on the outside of a glass of a cold beverage.
the main reason is condensation of water vapour in the air to water droplets
No…Co2 is carbon dioxide, what you exhale.
Condensation.
The temperature difference between the inside and outside of the bus causes condensation to build up on the inner surface of the windows - that's what you see as 'fog''Why ARE' - But anyway, it is due to condensation - it is colder outside the bus, making the windows cold, so the warm, muggy, humid water vapour condenses as water droplets on the window. Also, because people breathe out carbon dioxide, it can steam up the water droplets. Maybe try opening the windows.
Its called water vapor.Its happens when the outside is really hot or warm and the inside of whatever is cool or cold.
The water droplets are the result of the humidity in the air colling down and condensing on the outside of the glass. When water evaporates it turns into water vapor or steam we call the amount of water vapor in the air humidity. condensation is the reverse of evaporation and is also responsible for rain.