Water droplets form on the side of the bottle facing the window because that side is cooler due to cold air outside the window. When warm air inside the room comes in contact with the cool surface of the bottle, it loses heat and condenses into water droplets. This process is called condensation.
The interior of the bus is cooler than outside the bus because of the air conditioner. Water vapour outside in the air touches the cooler surface of the window of the bus and condenses to form water droplets on the window.
condensation
No, the formation of liquid water droplets on a window due to water vapor is an example of condensation, not evaporation. Condensation occurs when water vapor in the air cools and changes from a gas to a liquid, often seen as dew or droplets on surfaces. Evaporation, on the other hand, is the process of liquid water turning into water vapor.
Condensation. The water vapor in your breath (a gas) is chilling, and condensing into liquid water on the glass.
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.
When a chilled bottle is taken out of the refrigerator, the air around it cools down rapidly, causing the moisture in the air to condense on the cold surface of the bottle. This forms water droplets that are visible on the surface of the bottle.
Water Vapor
it is the condensation of steam or water vapour that causes water droplets to stick on the sides of the bottle
The water is too hot
No, water droplets in the air can also create a rainbow when they refract and reflect sunlight. A rainbow is formed by the refraction, dispersion, and reflection of light within water droplets in the atmosphere, not necessarily in a bottle.
Condensation has occurred, as the water vapor in the air has cooled down upon touching the cold surface of the water bottle, leading to the water vapor turning back into liquid water and forming droplets on the bottle.
it has evaporated
The interior of the bus is cooler than outside the bus because of the air conditioner. Water vapour outside in the air touches the cooler surface of the window of the bus and condenses to form water droplets on the window.
Water vapor in the air can condense on a cold window, forming droplets. This is because the cold temperature causes the water vapor to cool and change from a gas to a liquid state.
The water droplets are called condensation.
When a bottle of water from the deep freezer is exposed to warmer air, the temperature difference causes the air around the bottle to cool down and reach its dew point. As a result, water vapor in the air condenses and forms water droplets on the surface of the bottle. This is similar to how dew forms on grass in the early morning.
i assume you mean a water bottle? If so it's called condensation.