I think you are refering to "dew".
Water droplets form on a car due to condensation. When the surface of the car is cooler than the dew point temperature of the surrounding air, water vapor in the air condenses into liquid water droplets on the car's surface.
That's condensation—the water vapor in the air around the cup condenses on its surface because it's cold. So it comes from the air around the cup.
You can demonstrate that you breathe out water vapor by exhaling onto a cold surface, such as a mirror or glass. The moisture in your breath condenses upon contact with the cold surface, forming tiny droplets that create a foggy appearance. Alternatively, you could use a hygrometer to measure the humidity in your breath, showing the presence of water vapor.
Condensation. When warm, moist air comes into contact with a cold surface, the water vapor in the air condenses into liquid water droplets, causing the foggy appearance on the window.
A mirror is likely to turn cloudy if you breathe on it. The moisture on your breath condenses on the cold surface of the mirror.
Its called condensation, moisture in the air condenses on the cold surface of the tank.
When steam condenses onto a cold mirror, the water vapor in the steam loses energy to the cold surface of the mirror. This causes the water vapor to change phase from gas to liquid, forming water droplets on the mirror's surface.
water vapor in surrounding air condenses on the cold surface
This is because the water vapour in the air condenses on the cold surface of the apple.
This is due to condensation. The cold surface of the bottle condenses the water vapor in the air (humidity) into liquid water.
Condensation commonly occurs when a vapor is cooled. Water vapor from air which naturally condenses on cold surfaces into liquid water is called dew. Water vapor will only condense onto another surface when that surface is cooler than the temperature of the water vapor, or when the water vapor equilibrium in air, i. e. saturation humidity, has been exceeded. When water vapor condenses onto a surface, a net warming occurs on that surface.
When steam in the bathroom hits a cold surface like a mirror, it condenses into water droplets. This is because the cold surface causes the steam to lose heat energy, changing it back into liquid water.
It provides heat to the surface it condenses to. That is why gas condenses on cold surfaces.
Cold tap water is not itself misty. Rather, the cold temperature condenses water vapour in the air onto a conducting surface, such as a glass, a pipe, or a porcelain toilet tank.
Water vapor in your breath condenses as tiny droplets of liquid water on the cold glass surface.
Yes it is, this is due to the fact that the solubility of water vapour in air decreases with temperature and so the water vapour will condense on any cold surface.
Well, honey, those water droplets form on the outside of a glass of water because of condensation. When warm, moist air comes into contact with the cold surface of the glass, it cools down and can't hold onto all that moisture, so it turns into liquid droplets. It's just science doing its thing, no need to overcomplicate it.