The air on the inside of the car is warmer than the air outside.
well it could be because of the heat. if its cold out and you have the heat on in the car, then you will get hot and that will cause the window to fog.
Warm air contains more moisture than cold air. The air hits the cold window and the moisture is deposited on the cold glass. It is the same effect that causes your glass full of a cold beverage to start to drip down the sides.
When warm, moist air comes into contact with a cold surface (such as a cold window), the air cools down and loses its ability to hold moisture, leading to condensation. This condensation appears as fog on the window as the water vapor in the air turns into liquid water droplets.
some form of bonds formed in the air.
Fog is actually a low lying cloud, usually forms in the morning when the cold front is meeting with the warmer front *usually the sun*.
If you are talking about the lines in the back window of a car, those are the heating elements for cleaning fog, frost and ice from the window. If that isn't what you meant, please clarify the quesiton.
Yes, "He was part of the morning fog" is a metaphorical expression. It suggests that like the morning fog, he was mysterious, fleeting, and intangible.
When people breath they breath out moisture. Most air that we breath has a certain amount of moisture in it unless you are in the desert or air conditioning.Dry air causes our noses to dry out and become uncomfortable.Water needs energy to evaporate and stay as a vapour.These vapour particles lose energy as they strike the cold glass.The vapour then condenses and turns back into liquid water.This is really noticeable when sitting in a car on a cold day. The small air volume in the car soon becomes quite moist from people's breath and condenses on the windows.
moisture from your breathing for example condensing on the cold glass
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.
Windows fog because the glass is cold and the humidity is high inside the car. It has nothing to do with the age of the car. Try turning the fan up to circulate the air better, and if that doesn't work, turn the AC on -- but turn the heat up so it doesn't get cold. That will do it for sure.
Water vapor in your breath condenses as tiny droplets of liquid water on the cold glass surface.