Acid rain
The layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor is the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere where most weather phenomena occur. Water vapor concentration decreases with height in the atmosphere as temperature decreases.
At the Chemical Convention known as STP, or Standard Temperature and Pressure, 20 kg of Air contains more water vapor.
The stratosphere contains almost no water vapor.
It is physical, change of state, just cooling down
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor. This is the layer closest to the Earth's surface and where weather events occur.
Water vapor in the air that contains chemicals from air pollution is known as acid rain. When pollutants like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides combine with water vapor in the atmosphere, it forms acid rain, which can have harmful effects on the environment, including damaging plants and water bodies.
No: Vapor is defined as the gas phase of a substance that is mostly solid or liquid at equilibrium at standard temperature and pressure. Therefore, a liquid itself is never a vapor, but the liquid is in equilibrium with a vapor phase that contains the same chemical substance.
Water vapor
Water vapor is in the gaseous state.
The layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor is the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere where most weather phenomena occur. Water vapor concentration decreases with height in the atmosphere as temperature decreases.
At the Chemical Convention known as STP, or Standard Temperature and Pressure, 20 kg of Air contains more water vapor.
The stratosphere contains almost no water vapor.
No, this is definitely a physical change, absolutely not a chemical.
i think acid rain
A phase change is not a chemical change since the chemical remains the same; water is still water, whether it is in the solid, liquid, or gas phase.
It is physical, change of state, just cooling down
Condensation of water vapor is a physical change. It involves the transition of water from a gaseous state (vapor) to a liquid state without altering its chemical composition. The process is reversible; if the liquid water is heated, it can evaporate back into vapor.