When the vapor touches the cold surface of the funnel, it undergoes condensation and changes from a gas to a liquid. This process releases heat and energy, causing the vapor to lose its thermal energy and transition into a liquid state.
Water forms on the surface of the glass when ice melts due to condensation. As the ice melts, it releases water vapor which comes into contact with the cooler surface of the glass, causing it to condense and form water droplets.
The water vapour condensed on the windows. The vapour rising off the acid made me choke.
When you breathe on a window, the warm air from your breath contains moisture. When this warm, moist air comes in contact with the cooler surface of the window, it rapidly cools down. As a result, the moisture condenses into tiny water droplets that appear on the glass.
When vapors are cooled during distillation, they condense back into liquid form. This process happens in the condenser, where the hot vapor comes into contact with a colder surface, causing it to lose heat and return to its liquid state. The condensed liquid is then collected as the distillate.
You could use it like this...... I like to use water vapour. sorry it is not much of a sentence.......
When water vapor touches a mirror, it condenses into liquid water due to the temperature difference between the vapor and the mirror surface. This condensation creates a thin film of water droplets on the mirror's surface, causing it to appear foggy or misty.
When water vapor touches a cold surface, it condenses and turns back into liquid water. This occurs because the cold surface causes the water vapor to lose heat energy, leading to its transition from a gas to a liquid state. This process is known as condensation and is commonly observed on windows or mirrors.
Water vapour (commonly referred to as steam) is turned back into liquid by a process of condensation. When the warm vapour touches a cold surface (a window pane, for instance) the vapour cools and forms droplets of liquid water.
Anything evaporated would be funnelled upwards where the vapour could be collected if a tube was to be fastened to the funnel .
When water vapor is evaporation outside it rises to the sky and goes through the water cycle.
It's called condensation when vapour cools and turns into liquid.
Install a large funnel then reduced to a thinner/smaller funnel... At the point where the flowing air is being compressed whilst flowing from large to small. Introduce a fuel vapour and ignite it.....The explosion of fuel vapour and compressed air expands as thrust threw the smaller funnel....(as a vacum can't exist) more air is sucked in threw the front (larger funnel).. And the whole cycle repeats it's self.... Example of this: Second World War -Doddle Boobs
Water vapour changing to solid on a surface is sublimation of the vapour. For water the product is referred to as rime or hoarfrost.
Condensation of water vapour in the atmosphere into water droplets on the surface. The surrounding air contains water vapour. When the air touches the glass it becomes cooler and can no longer contain so much water, so it condenses out onto the glass.
If it happens in a cloud, the drops combine until too heavy, and it rains.
Steam is water vapour - just a very hot form of it.
Water forms on the surface of the glass when ice melts due to condensation. As the ice melts, it releases water vapor which comes into contact with the cooler surface of the glass, causing it to condense and form water droplets.