okay so your breath is hot and the air is cold so they mix... there is also moisture in your breath so the moisture in your breath might be condensing right in front of you!
When you exhale on a cold morning, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside. This temperature difference causes the water vapor in your breath to condense into tiny water droplets, creating a visible mist or cloud. This phenomenon is known as condensation.
Yes, when you exhale in cold air, the moisture from your breath can condense into tiny water droplets, making it visible as a cloud of mist. This is because the cold air cannot hold as much moisture, causing it to condense and become visible.
It is because the warm air in your lungs condenses immediately when it is breathed out and comes into contact with the cold air. What you are physically seeing are very small droplets of water.
Exhaled breath contains warm, moist air from your lungs. When this warm air comes into contact with cold air, it cools down and can no longer hold as much moisture, leading to condensation. This is similar to how a glass of cold water will cause moisture to form on the outside of the glass in a warm room.
A simple way would be to breathe into a mirror. Water vapour would condense on its surface and fog it up. The condensate can be confirmed as water by testing with dry cobalt chloride paper, which would turn from blue to pink.
Your breath is substantially colder than the outside air... when your warm breath suddenly is immersed in that cold air, it forms condensation.
When the air is cold outside, you can see your breath as a smokey wisp in front of you. This is because your breath is warmer than the surrounding air.
Condensation. It is the same process that causes moisture on the outside of a cold drink. Since your breath is warmer than the outside air, some of the moisture in your breath condenses in the cold air and forms molecules of liquid water and ice.
When you exhale on a cold morning, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside. This temperature difference causes the water vapor in your breath to condense into tiny water droplets, creating a visible mist or cloud. This phenomenon is known as condensation.
I see my breath, it's just that cold It's so cold i see it hold in the air... ?? i ain't such a gr8 poet :)
The cold causes the moisture in your breath to condense, making it visible.
The reason you can see your breath in cold weather is because the water vapor in your breath is condensing (condensation). You can't see it in hot weather because condensation can't occur in warmer weather.
It shouldn't. If its really cold in the room or where ever, you might be seeing a vapor like when you see your breath outside on a cold day.
When you exhale in cold weather, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside and condenses into tiny water droplets. This condensation creates the visible cloud or mist that you see when you breathe out in the cold.
by the temperature outside
When you exhale on a cold day, your breath appears cold because the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside, causing the water vapor in your breath to condense into tiny droplets, creating a visible mist.
slightly above 'see your breath' cold.