Yes, water vapor is an example of a phase. In the context of matter, phases refer to distinct states of a substance, which include solid, liquid, and gas. Water exists in three phases: ice (solid), liquid water, and water vapor (gas), with water vapor being the gaseous state that occurs when water evaporates.
This the gaseous phase of water.
Water evaporating into the air is an example of the water cycle in nature. Evaporation is the process where liquid water turns into water vapor due to heat from the sun.
Evaporation, as when water is boiled. It changes phase, from a liquid to water vapor, a gas which is invisible.
Deposition is a phase change in which a gas turns into a solid without passing through the liquid phase. An example is frost forming on the ground, going from water vapor straight to ice.
No. Evaporation is when water liquid changes to water vapor. In the vapor there are still water molecules. The only sense in which there is separation is that water molecules are on average much closer together in the liquid phase than in the gas phase.
water vapor
water vapor
water vapor
This the gaseous phase of water.
Frost is a phase change of a gas to a solid (deposition). Water vapor turns directly to ice.
Water evaporating into the air is an example of the water cycle in nature. Evaporation is the process where liquid water turns into water vapor due to heat from the sun.
Evaporation, as when water is boiled. It changes phase, from a liquid to water vapor, a gas which is invisible.
It is the gaseous phase of water
Deposition is a phase change in which a gas turns into a solid without passing through the liquid phase. An example is frost forming on the ground, going from water vapor straight to ice.
Water cannot exist in gaseous state - water vapour is small droplets of water suspended in air, not water as a gas
It is the gaseous phase of water
It is the gaseous phase of water