Well, if your windows are thin and get cold enough, the moist, humid air outside will condense on the surface of the windows, much like the condensation that appears on a cold beverage can or glass in a humid room.
Because they are inefficient and cold due to conduction from indoors to outdoors.
No, that is yours since it is home maintenance. You need to get some airflow over to the windows to prevent condensation. You may also need to seal the windows better from the outside. (I had the same problem in the Chicago area with an older house; the condensation would then freeze.)
It is called condensation, warm and humid inside, cooler outside.
Yes, condensation can make any windows foggy.
It is the clearing of condensation on the inside of car windows
keep it closed the windows .but if need fresh air from outside , open the windows.
The temperature difference between the inside and outside of the bus causes condensation to build up on the inner surface of the windows - that's what you see as 'fog''Why ARE' - But anyway, it is due to condensation - it is colder outside the bus, making the windows cold, so the warm, muggy, humid water vapour condenses as water droplets on the window. Also, because people breathe out carbon dioxide, it can steam up the water droplets. Maybe try opening the windows.
Most common problems that causes this in order:Plugged inside house air filterPlugged or blocked return or outlet ductsPlugged or dirty condenser unit (outside of house)Plugged condensation drain on central unit inside houseAllowing outside air into house, open windows, doors etc.Mechanical or electrical problem with unitCheck in order before calling a repair guy.
Condensation.
They feel drowsy for lack of oxygen The windows steam up from the condensation of their breath. Their body-heat warms the room up and the windows are colder on the outside than on the inside.
you are so stupid this is COMPUTER windows not house windows!
condensation probably