Hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, chlorine, argon, bromine, krypton, xenon and radon are all gases at 100 deg C. Only Bromine will condense if cooled to room temperature.
The temperature at which nitrogen becomes a liquid is 77 Kelvin (-196°C, or -321°F).
Water vapor in air condenses when the air temperature drops below the dew point temperature, causing the water vapor to change from a gaseous state to a liquid state. This typically happens in the atmosphere when air is cooled, such as during the night or when warm air rises and cools at higher altitudes.
The air needs to be cooled, the amount depending on how much water vapour is in it. When it's cooled sufficiently the water vapour will condense on solid things as water, or become very small droplets (fog/cloud). When this happens in the early mornings we call it dew, and the temperature at which the water will condense is known as the dewpoint.
As the Earth cooled, the gases that make up the atmosphere, such as water vapor and carbon dioxide, began to condense into liquid form. This condensation occurred because the decrease in temperature caused the gas molecules to lose energy and come closer together, leading to the formation of liquid droplets.
THEY THINK about 3.9 billion years ago (: 4.4 billion years ago(:
Oxygen and Nitrogen are the two gases that do not condense when air is cooled to 200 degrees Celsius. They remain as gases at this temperature.
Yes, water can condense at 0 degrees Celsius if the surrounding temperature drops below the dew point, which is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with water vapor. If the air is cooled further, the excess moisture will condense into liquid water.
To condense oxygen from air, the air would need to be cooled to a temperature below its boiling point, which is -183 degrees Celsius. This cooling process would cause the oxygen molecules to condense into liquid form, which can then be collected separately.
When cooled enough it will condense into a liquid. The required temperature changes with the substance.
It will gradually drop to below 10 degrees.
When air molecules are cooled, they lose kinetic energy and move more slowly, which causes them to come closer together. As they come closer together, the air density increases, leading to a decrease in volume. Eventually, if cooled sufficiently, the air molecules may condense into a liquid or solid form depending on the temperature and pressure.
Cooled temperatures are still temperatures!. You can measure them using expansion thermometers down to around -15 deg Celsius. Below that you will probably need a thermocouple.
Dew point, which is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with water vapor and begins to condense into liquid water.
Yes, water contracts when cooled from 4 degrees Celsius because it is in its densest state at that temperature. As it cools further, it expands until it reaches its freezing point, at which point it expands again and turns into ice.
The temperature at which nitrogen becomes a liquid is 77 Kelvin (-196°C, or -321°F).
The boiling point of the element argon is -185.7 degrees Celsius or -302.3 degrees Fahrenheit. Argon is a noble gas that remains in a gaseous state at room temperature and pressure, so it needs to be cooled significantly to reach its boiling point.
Water vapor in air condenses when the air temperature drops below the dew point temperature, causing the water vapor to change from a gaseous state to a liquid state. This typically happens in the atmosphere when air is cooled, such as during the night or when warm air rises and cools at higher altitudes.