Water Vapour from the atmosphere condenses into water droplets on the side of the soda can due to its low temperature. The same can be observed on the side of a glass filled with a cold substance.
Food and water and some warm clothes when it's cold and freezing outside.
cool drinks are generally referred to as those containing water, syrup, lemonade and some soda. Whereas soft drinks are like pepsi, thumps up etc.
Dew, condensation or in some cases: sweat (like when a glass of cold water gets all wet on the outside).
Carbonated water. Carbonation does some weird bubbly thing for whatever reason, but it's the carbonation in the pepsi and with all carbonated soft drinks.
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.
alright for you crazed fans i got some reserach she said to Miami press that her favorite drink is pepsi she said she loves it and coca cola is to strong for her but in the morning she has a nice cold glass of orange juice after on coca cola she drinks water at night.............
That water is about 15 degrees, it's freezing cold. She did a complete 360 degree spin on her bike. It is 73 degrees outside today.
Unfortunately, I don't have an answer (sorry). But i can confirm. I stuck a diet Pepsi and some Pepsis in the top shelf of the fridge (by the freezer). The diet Pepsi froze and exploded. The Pepsis were fine - not even slushy.
A good experiment to try, when it's really cold outside, is to buy a bottle of bubbles. Blow the bubbles outside and see what happens to them.
Poor blood circulation or you're not wearing any gloves when its cold outside.
Everywhere that the relative humidity is greater than 0. Clouds are water vapor. If you take a dry cold can of soda outside and it becomes wet, that water condensed from the air because cold air cannot hold as much water as warm air, so the air around the can loses some of its water to the can.
Not exactly.The water that appears on the outside of the icy bottle is condensation of the water vapor in the air around the bottle. The cold temperature of the ice in the bottle causes the condensation. There are lots of water molecules in air -- there is more water in the air on a humid day then on a hot dry day, but there is always some water in the air. When air is cooled by coming in contact with the icy bottle, it condenses, and goes from being a gas to being a liquid (just like how steam turns back into water when it cools). It is the condensed water from the air that makes the outside of the bottle wet.If a cold bottle was in air that had no water vapor in it (unlikely except in a laboratory), then it would not get wet.