Slightly less than 1% of the air that you breathe in.
43646747 precipitation
3 breaths for children, 5 breaths for adults.
Yes, when you exhale in cold air, the moisture from your breath can condense into tiny water droplets, making it visible as a cloud of mist. This is because the cold air cannot hold as much moisture, causing it to condense and become visible.
Exhaled breath contains warm, moist air from your lungs. When this warm air comes into contact with cold air, it cools down and can no longer hold as much moisture, leading to condensation. This is similar to how a glass of cold water will cause moisture to form on the outside of the glass in a warm room.
Because the cold air around you cannot hold as much water as warm air in your breath, the moisture in your breath condenses when it hits the cold air and forms into a little cloud.
The answer varies from one individual to another and depends on how deeply they breathe.
The substance is named condensation. It is the result of a reaction between your hot breath and the cold mirror. Your breath is warm and thus holds more moisture. When it touches the cold mirror it cools rapidly. This new colder air cannot hold as much water and therefore deposits the extra on the mirror.
The effects of smoking on respiration can be detrimental. When you smoke, you inhibit the natural flow of oxygen, and each cigarette delivers some 4,000 toxic substances to the respiratory system.
how much of wet in solid particles its called moisture
There is around 66% of moisture in a chicken
Clams breath through gills much like fish.