In an ice crystal the molecules of water are not tightly packed together. When temperature increases, an increasing number of molecules get loose from the crystals and fly around bumping into other molecules. This increased chaotic movement leads to a smaller average distance between the water molecules and, thus, to a smaller overall volume.
Contract?
Water is a polar molecule. The hydrogen atoms "bend" away from the oxygen atom creating a slight charge. This allows the molecules to stick together. This is why water beads up, why in space water stays together in a glob, why you can overfill a glass, and why hitting a pool after a wicked nasty cannon ball hurts so bad.
the warmer water vapour touches the inner cooler surface , loses heat and condense into water droplet
Chromatin can't "condense of" anything, chromatin can condense into Chromosomes.
Gas (water vapor in the air) to liquid (on the surface).
When water reaches boiling, it becomes steam. Once the water cools down, typically below 100 degrees Fahrenheit, it will begin to form water droplets or condensation.
Prophase
Neither. Dew is a result of condensation. As the air cools in the evening, it is less able to stay as humid, so the drops of water condense on the leaves.
molecule
Condense
What does condense mean like if you reading a story and it asks you what does condense mean? What does condense mean like if you reading a story and it asks you what does condense mean?
WaterWaterand More Water
Rain
no
simple it depends if it is sunny it evaporates if it is cold but not at freezing it will condense Liam sams
Evaporate and condense off the water.
You can filter it or evaporate and condense the water
The verb form is "condense"; "condensate" is not a word. Water vapor in air condense to form water droplets; the water vapor is actually condensing from a gaseous state to more dense liquid state.
Yes,It can.
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.,