Yes, the condensation of water vapor from the air on a cold drink can is typically considered an irreversible process. When water vapor cools upon contact with the cold surface of the can, it transforms into liquid water, which can then drip off or be absorbed. While the vapor can return to the air if the conditions change, the specific condensation event itself cannot be reversed without altering the temperature and pressure of the system.
Condensing
The water vapour is condensing.
The process is known as the condensing of water vapour into liquid water.
The condensing water droplets will form rain.
Condensing is the process of changing water vapour to liquid water.
water vapour in our breath is condensing on the cold surface of the mirror
Yes water vapour or steam can be reverted back to water through the process known as condensing. If the steam is collected and cooled it will turn to water droplets that can be collected as water.
Evaporation is the process of water becoming a vapour. Condensation is the cooling of the water vapour back into a liquid.
A process that water vapour changes into water.
Water vapour from your breath and other sources condensing on cold glass, the glass becomes covered in a thin layer of water.
No, when water boils it evaporates into single water molecules. We can see the cooler of these as they condense into steam. Steam or water vapour is the water molecules re-condensing into water droplets.
In a bath there is less hot water vapour condensing into particles for you to see. Steam is made up of water vapour that you can't see. More fog is produced from a shower because cold air surrounding the hot water from the shower causes water vapour to change into small water droplets called fog not steam.