Actually, everything fogs up. You just can see it better on the mirror. When you take a hot shower, it produces steam and this steam will rise in the room and then cool off and descend to the ground. As it moves, it sticks to all solid surfaces, the walls, cieling, the sink, the toilet, etc., leaving a layer of moisture on everything. Its just more evident on the mirror or a window.
HgO is silver in colour as it is called silver mirror
You can verify if a diamond is real by performing a few simple tests. One common method is the fog test, where you breathe on the diamond to see if it fogs up (real diamonds disperse heat quickly so they don't fog up). You can also use a loupe to look for imperfections or a jeweler's tool called a diamond tester to measure the thermal conductivity of the stone.
Fog appears on bathroom mirrors like how your hot breath appears on glass when you breathe on it. The hot vapor in the air mixes with cool glass and fog appears. In other words, water vapor condenses on a smooth, cold surface creating condensation (steam).
A mirror is a mixture because it is made up of multiple substances including a layer of reflective material (such as silver or aluminum) and a glass backing.
Chirality refers to the property of asymmetry in a molecule, where the molecule cannot be superimposed on its mirror image. Chiral molecules have non-superimposable mirror images called enantiomers. Chirality is important in fields such as chemistry and biology due to its influence on the behavior and interactions of molecules.
No. The steam from a hot shower fogs the mirror.
Hold a cold mirror close to your mouth, slowly blow your breath across the mirror. Where the mirror fogs up, that is the moisture in your breath condensing on the mirror.
the heat from the shower causes it to fog and if ur window for the bathroom is small then it takes a while for the air to escape causing the smoke to become traped to your mirror like if u blow your breath towards the mirror then it fogs and also not only your mirror gets foggy but also the floor or wall.thank u very much
When a mirror fogs up, it is due to water vapor in the air condensing on the cooler surface of the mirror. The water vapor forms tiny droplets that scatter light, causing the mirror to appear cloudy or hazy.
The physical change is just water vapor condensing. (hope this helps) :~)
Yes: shove a mirror under the person's nose and see if it fogs up. If it does, there's definitely serotonin present in the brain. Serotonin is a neurotransmitter; if there wasn't any of it in the brain, the person would not be alive (and hence not breathing to fog up the mirror).
Fogging a mirror with your breath occurs when moisture from your warm breath hits the cooler surface of the mirror, causing condensation to form. This effect is temporary and the foggy appearance will disappear as the moisture evaporates.
They are called "Smokey" because of the frequent fogs they have.
it is called reflections
No, fogs cannot have beans for a meal.
FOGS Colts Challenge was created in 1986.
A mirror maker is typically called a glassworker, mirror artisan, or mirror manufacturer.