At higher altitudes it is colder. The cooler air can't hold the water in gas form so it condenses out as clouds.
Yes, it will make water colder.
Yes. Condensation would be going from gas to liquid. That means it gets colder. Temperature is a measure of energy. So the colder it is, the less energy. If it gets colder, it looses energy. Loosing energy is exothermic.
Because of the immence pressure at the bottom of the ocean the water is unable to turn to gas so does not actually boil. It remains in a super heated liguid state and quickly rises through the colder water until the water presure is such that the water can expand into gas or cools to the temperature of the water around it.
Cold water. The colder the better. You might want to read up on carbonation for more details. If you are into the math and science of these things, Henry's Law covers that.
Yes, but it freezes colder than water.
At higher altitudes it is colder. The cooler air can't hold the water in gas form so it condenses out as clouds.
Vapor comes from the water's steam so therefore, plain water is colder IF it is room temperature or colder. It obviously wouldn't be colder if it was boiling.
Colder
Yes, it will make water colder.
a gas at -143 degrees
Hotter the temperature the hotter the water or the colder the temperature the colder the water gets
make it colder
Yes. Condensation would be going from gas to liquid. That means it gets colder. Temperature is a measure of energy. So the colder it is, the less energy. If it gets colder, it looses energy. Loosing energy is exothermic.
High surface area of the water The colder the water the more dissolved oxygen Running water will dissolve more oxygen
When the pressure of a gas is reduced it gets colder.
Water has 3 states, solid(ice), liquid(water, and gas(Water vapor). When water is boiled, it gathers heat energy. It then becomes a gas , breaking away from other water particles. it gathers together on a colder surface and loses some of that energy, reverting it back to water.