Condensation comes from water vapour in the atmosphere turning into liquid water. It took heat for the original water to turn into vapour, and that heat is still in the vapour. It is called latent heat. When the vapour condenses, that latent heat is given back and warms the glass.
The immediate area around the cup of the drink is cooled to the point where water can no longer be a gas so water turns into its liquid state on the cup. Remember that heat (or thermal energy) is what determines the state of water, less heat turns the water to its liquid and then eventually solid states whereas more heat evaporates water into its gas state.
If warm moist air comes into contact with the cold outer surface of a glass of water, condensation takes place.
Due to condensation. Condensation isThe process of changing from a gaseous to a liquid or solid stateatmospheric moisture that has condensed because of cold
Water droplets form when the water vapor cools. The cooling causes it to condense into water. A warm glass does not cause cooling or condensation, so no water droplets.
Condensation - the cold glass causes the warm air to condense from gas to liquid.
A cloud is formed by condensation, during the water cycle.
Answer this question… When water droplets appear on the outside of a cold glass of iced tea, this is an example of _____.
Condensation is a science word where vapor like water vapor changes into a liquid. On my glass the cold drink causes condensation on the outside of the glass.
Condensation can only occur on a glass that is cold. The reason why condensation forms is because water vapor in the air (a gas) cools and turns into liquid water when it comes into contact with a cold surface.
It needs to be added, in order for condensation to take place you have to have both cold and warm temperatures. For example, if you have ice water you usually have condensation because the ice and the air outside the glass mix and make condensation.
Great icetea!
The glass of cold water has condensation forming on the outside of it.
condensation