somehow
no
these form in the sky when water vapour condenses into water droplets
because mirrors are cold
The surface of the mirror is cooler than the surroundings. When the water vapour comes into contact with the surface of the mirror, they condense.
Water does NOT condense into the air. Water EVAPORATES into the air. When air cools sufficiently, then water vapour will condense out of the air as, mist, fog, rain, hail, snow. etc.,
no
Water droplets need to condense on them.
these form in the sky when water vapour condenses into water droplets
Yes,It can.
because mirrors are cold
It is reversible . Water vapour can condense and become liquid. Evaporation and condensation are phases in the water cycle
evaporate the water or evaporation. condense the water vapour or condensation
The surface of the mirror is cooler than the surroundings. When the water vapour comes into contact with the surface of the mirror, they condense.
The air needs to be cooled, the amount depending on how much water vapour is in it. When it's cooled sufficiently the water vapour will condense on solid things as water, or become very small droplets (fog/cloud). When this happens in the early mornings we call it dew, and the temperature at which the water will condense is known as the dewpoint.
This happens because the liquid particles of the water react to the heat. The particles start to move and bounce about rapidly, causing the water to condense and turn to vapour(which is steam). This is a great example of the chemical reaction of liquid->gas.
no it can't because wood is not cold
Water as a vapour (gas?) has to condense back to water, which can then become a solid if frozen.