The air in our lungs is very warm and moist. Warm air can hold more water vapor than cold air. When we breathe out in a cold environment, the temperature of that breath drops rapidly as it mixes with the cold air. As a result a portion of the moisture condenses into tiny water droplets. As mixing continues, though, the drier air disperses the moisture, and the droplets evaporate.
Because your breath is hot against the cold air so the hot vapor appears against the cold.
It is water vapor from within your body.
Because you have water vapor on your mouth when you het it out it gets cold and turns to water.
Like rain
midgets are taking over the world
here is a way to find out... breath in, then breath out... do you see anything?... no, the stuff you breath out is carbon dioxide.So the answer is yes... but when you can see your breath sometimes (usually in winter), that is because your breath is warm and the air is cold. Not because the cold makes carbon dioxide visible.
When you breath out the water in your breath condenses (freezes) allowing you to see the ice particles
Physical. What's actually visible is not "breath", but rather the moisture in the breath condensing in the colder air. This is a change in physical state from vapor to liquid (in the form of tiny droplets), so it is a physical change.
it will form a cloud
By snow, I'm going to have to guess that your talking about your breath. Your breath is actually water vapor. To see that, the temperature must be or be lower than the dew point. To test it out, go into a room and pour water into a clear glass beaker. Keep turning down the heat to make it cold. The moment you see tiny water droplets forming on the beaker, take the temperature. That temperature is the dew point for that room.
Because your breath is warm, the air is cold, they meet, and the become a gas that you can see.
The cold causes the moisture in your breath to condense, making it visible.
Because when you breath warm air comes from inside you so the heat will show on the cold. Also called 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 :)
slightly above 'see your breath' cold.
because of a warm day and we can see our breath on a cold day
The warm water vapour in your breath condenses into water droplets when it hits the cold air.
carbon dioxide as a gas
Yes you can because hot air from your mouth combined with the cold air molecules creates a visual aid so you can see your breath.
here is a way to find out... breath in, then breath out... do you see anything?... no, the stuff you breath out is carbon dioxide.So the answer is yes... but when you can see your breath sometimes (usually in winter), that is because your breath is warm and the air is cold. Not because the cold makes carbon dioxide visible.
shortness of breath and coughing?...I had a cold but should i go see doctor
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!