The water vapour in your warm breath condenses back into water on contact with the cold surface of 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.
Condensation is formed when water vapor in the air cools and changes into liquid water droplets, usually when it comes into contact with a cold surface. This process is responsible for the droplets you see on the external surface of a cold glass or on the inside of a window on a cold day.
You throw a ball and accidentally break a glass window Describe the relationship between the momentum of the ball and what happens to the window?"It depends on the window and the size of the object you are throwing or using to break it.
Condensation is the process of a gas turning into a liquid. A cloud is formed by condensation, during the water cycle. Condensation droplets often form on the outside of a glass of an iced beverage.
Condensation is the process in which water vapor in the air cools and transforms into liquid water droplets, typically on a cold surface like a window. It is the opposite of evaporation, where liquid water turns into water vapor.
It is called condensation, which occurs when warm, humid air comes into contact with a cold surface like a window. The warm air cools down and releases moisture in the form of tiny droplets on the window.
condensation. The warm moist air from your breath cools upon contact with the cold window, causing the water vapor to condense into tiny droplets on the surface.
The water droplets are called condensation.
condensation, where the warm water vapor in your breath comes into contact with the cold window, causing it to cool and turn from a gas to a liquid.
Condensation - the cold glass causes the warm air to condense from gas to liquid.
Condensation.
That is an example of condensation. When warm, moist air comes into contact with a cooler surface like a window, the air cools down and cannot hold as much water vapor, leading to the moisture in the air condensing into water droplets.
Water Vapor
Your exhaled, warm, moist breath will condense into droplets of water when in contact with the cold glass.
The steam from a kettle will hit the cold window surface and lose heat rapidly, causing it to condense back into water droplets. This is because the cold window cools down the steam quickly, which is why you can see the steam forming water droplets on the window.
Condensation. The water vapor in your breath (a gas) is chilling, and condensing into liquid water on the glass.
When you breathe on a cold window, the warm air from your breath hits the cold surface of the window and cools down. As the warm air cools, its ability to hold moisture decreases, causing the water vapor in your breath to condense and form tiny water droplets on the window, creating the steamed-up effect.