No. It does not need to lose energy, but it may need a lower pressure for ice to form. The freezing point of water is 0 degrees C only at 1 atmosphere of pressure.
When steam condenses to form water, it releases energy in the form of heat to the surroundings. This energy is needed to break the intermolecular forces that hold the water molecules together as steam.
You have to put energy IN to keep it boiling, so the water molecules gain energy (from the heating source): the answer is 'GAIN energy' and NOT (as wrongly stated before) 'LOSE' it.water only looses energy when it turns into a solid.and adds energy when turning into a gas
Condensation releases latent heat energy as water vapor transitions into liquid water. This energy is absorbed during evaporation and released during condensation, helping to maintain the earth's energy balance.
The particles will move slower as energy is lost.
Well let's say that the gas is water vapour. For it to become a solid, it must first become a liquid. It does this by being cooled (it condenses) which makes it lose energy, slowing down the vibration of the particles. When it solidifies, the particles vibrate even slower, losing their energy. So here's your answer- it does neither, it just loses energy.
With clean water energy is stored but dirty water keeps energy but loses it in the end
The cells of the vegetable lose their water
Calories measure energy. One calorie is defined as the amount of energy that it takes to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius. The calories in food tell you how much energy you will get from eating that food )or drinking that liquid.) You become overweight when you eat and drink more calories than you can use up during the day by exercising; you lose weight if you use up more calories than you have taken in during the day.For people, it measures the amount of potentail energy a food or drink can provide our bodies with. In science, it is the amount fo energy it takes a certain substance to raise 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius.Calories measure energy
When steam condenses to form water, it releases energy in the form of heat to the surroundings. This energy is needed to break the intermolecular forces that hold the water molecules together as steam.
when we no longer have a sun to feed it energy.
Yes, it is. When steam condenses into water, the water molecules lose energy and this energy is transferred to the surroundings. Loosing energy is exothermic.
The water cycle does not lose energy; it is a continuous process driven by solar energy. When water evaporates from oceans, lakes, and rivers, it gains energy from the sun. This energy fuels the cycle as water vapor rises, condenses, and falls back to Earth as precipitation.
You do not run out of hot water, and do not lose energy in storing hot water.
As the water vapor cools at 101 degrees Celsius, it will undergo a phase change and condense into liquid water. This is because the cooling causes the water vapor to lose energy and come together to form liquid droplets.
The cells of the vegetable lose their water
When water gains energy the water molecules turn into vapor also known as Evaporation.
The body uses energy to work out; energy ends up as heat. If you cannot radiate or otherwise lose the extra heat, you become warm.