Condensation - The surface of the bottle and the air just above it will be cool enough to allow condensation of the water vapor in the air onto the bottle's surface.
Because the water evaporates outside of it and makes it sticky and cold. A2. The surrounding air contains water vapour, but can only hold so much for a given temperature. The cold of the can, causes the air touching it to cool. The air cannot hold the water at this cooler temperature, so it comes out, as water droplets on the can. So the water comes from the air.
yes it is made of water vapor ====================== No. Water vapor is an invisible gas. You can't see water vapor. Clouds, on the other hand, can be seen. That's because clouds are composed of water droplets - liquid water, or water ice - tiny ice crystals. Either way, clouds are not invisible water vapor. Clouds can form as water vapor condenses to form tiny droplets of liquid water. These droplets can come together - coalesce - to form larger droplets. You've seen fog. Fog is a cloud at ground level. And if you've seen fog, then you've seen that clouds are composed of tiny water droplets suspended in air. Clouds can also be composed of ice crystals. (Cirrus clouds) In one case liquid water can freeze to form ice particles. It is more likely that water vapor undergoes "deposition", the opposite of sublimation. Sublimation is the process where a solid goes directly to the gas phase without going through the liquid phase. Deposition is the process where a gas goes directly from the gas phase to the solid phase.
Cool it. The moisture in the air condenses to form a cloud when it is cooled. Eventually the moisture droplets are big enough to start to precipitate to form rain. You see your cloud of breath when you walk outside on a cold day and the moisture in your breath condenses to form a visible cloud.
The steam condenses to form water droplets on the cooler surface.
I should never assume; however, assuming you mean a cold glass in a hotter humid environment; condensation.
it causes condensation
Water droplets form on the side of the bottle facing the window because that side is cooler due to cold air outside the window. When warm air inside the room comes in contact with the cool surface of the bottle, it loses heat and condenses into water droplets. This process is called condensation.
The water is too hot
When the water is warmer, it has a higher vapour pressure making tiny droplets of water (water vapour) more likely form in the air inside the bottle. These droplets will then condense when they make contact with the side of the bottle because it is cooler there. -Alex listin that's soo boring i mean tlk about somtin eles
No, water droplets in the air can also create a rainbow when they refract and reflect sunlight. A rainbow is formed by the refraction, dispersion, and reflection of light within water droplets in the atmosphere, not necessarily in a bottle.
rain
yes.
If you mean the condensation on the shiny surface of the bottle soon after you've filled it, then it's the cold surface cooling the air around it causing that part of the air to be able to hold less moisture vapour, and this vapour condenses out as liquid. Once the bottle has warmed to the natural air temperature this won't happen any more.
If your bottle is half-full, you will see condensation forming on the inside walls of the bottle. That's because water evaporates then condensates on the outside, then falls back into the main water body. It works the exact same way as it does on the outside world here on Earth.
Fog and dew also consist of water droplets. You will also notice water condensing on the outside of a glass of a cold beverage.
Warm air can hold more moisture (humidity) than cool air. Therefore, when the air cools off and the amount of moisture in the air is too high, some water separates out from the air. This is why dew falls on a cool summer night or we get a frost some winter evenings. The water bottle example is the same process, but smaller scale. The air cools off right next to the cold bottle, and cannot hold as much humidity. So, like dew on the ground, you get condensation ("sweat") on the outside of your water bottle.
the main reason is condensation of water vapour in the air to water droplets