A substance in the gaseous state that is typically a liquid or solid at room temperature can be referred to as a vapor. Examples include water vapor or steam, which is the gaseous state of water.
No. Vapor is a substance in its gaseous state. Ice is water in its solid state.
Steam is water in the vapour (gaseous) state; Ice is water in the solid state; liquid water is water in its liquid state - but the water's composition is the same in all three states.
Gaseous
A vapor is a gas, but it is at a temperature where the substance could also exist as a liquid or a solid. The easiest example is water. Water will evaporate at any temperature above 0 degrees Celsius...but if the pressure of the water vapor increases sufficiently or if the air becomes saturated, the water vapor will condense back to liquid water.
Water in a gaseous state is water vapour, or mist. It is commonly known as steam if the water has been heated.
solid = ice liquid = water gaseous = water vapour
Water in a gaseous state is water vapour, or mist. It is commonly known as steam if the water has been heated.
Gaseous water is called vapours.
Gaseous water is called steam.
Gaseous
The process that changes water into a gaseous state is called evaporation, where water is heated and transforms into vapor or steam.
A substance in the gaseous state that is typically a liquid or solid at room temperature can be referred to as a vapor. Examples include water vapor or steam, which is the gaseous state of water.
Steam, clouds, and fog are all examples of water in a gaseous state.
it turns from a liquid state to a gaseous state
water in a gaseous state
When it evaporates.