because is liquid to gas
The formation of fog is a physical change, not a chemical one.
When the windows begin to fog, the physical change is: condensation of water vapor.
Dry ice doesn't "turn into smoke". Dry ice causes moisture in the air to condense, forming fog. This is a purely physical, not chemical, change.
During the day, the sun warms the air near the ground, causing it to rise and mix with drier air above, which disperses the fog. At night, the ground cools, causing the air near the surface to cool and its moisture to condense into fog. This process is known as radiational cooling.
Fog is a chemical weathering.
Examples of condensation include water droplets forming on the outside of a cold glass of water, fog forming on a cool morning, and clouds forming in the atmosphere when warm air rises and cools down.
The type of fog that forms in valleys at night is Radiation Fog. It usually does not last long after sunrise.
Into the night and fog in German is In die Nacht und in den Nebel hinein
you go into the water where theres fog and there is for specific spots but at midnight the spots will change
No, the fog appearing on the windshield from cold weather is a physical change. It occurs when warm, moisture-laden air inside the car comes into contact with the cold windshield, causing water vapor to condense into tiny water droplets, creating the fog.
Fog
The phase change occurring when fog disappears is evaporation. This process happens when water droplets in the fog gain enough energy, typically from the sun's heat, to transition from a liquid state to a gaseous state, forming water vapor. As the water vapor disperses into the air, the fog gradually dissipates, leading to clearer visibility.