Yes, vapor can flow. Vapor is the gaseous phase of a substance that was previously a liquid or solid. It can flow and move like a gas, filling any space available to it.
Water vapor can flow because it is a gas, which means its molecules are not confined to a fixed position like in a solid or liquid. As a gas, water vapor has enough kinetic energy to move freely and fill the space available to it. This allows water vapor to flow and disperse throughout the air.
In British English, the verb of vapour is vaporise.In American English, the verb is vaporize.Other verbs depending on the tense are vaporises (US - vaporizes), vaporising (US - vaporizing) and vaporised (US - vaporized),
Water vapour changing to solid on a surface is sublimation of the vapour. For water the product is referred to as rime or hoarfrost.
water vapour
Flow can be measured using instruments such as flow meters or by calculating flow rate using the formula Q = A * V, where Q is the flow rate, A is the cross-sectional area of the flow, and V is the velocity of the fluid. Measuring devices like mass flow meters, ultrasonic flow meters, and electromagnetic flow meters are commonly used for measuring flow in various industries.
Film, vapour, cloud, haze, fog, murk...
In the automobiles, in the fuel system,sometimes large amount of vapour formation takes place at higher temperature.The cause is evaporation of some of the more volatile components of the petrol. Bubbles of vapour from in the fuel system can prevent the easy flow of fuel. This is called vapour lock.
Mercury vapour contained in an evacuated glass bulb.Vapour warmed.High voltage applied to electrodes inside lamp.Vapour conducts and allows current flow, excitation causes vapour to glow brightly.Little or no resistance, so requires a ballast in line.
I suspect you are thinking of clouds, but this is not an accurate description of them. It is important to realise that clouds contain droplets of liquid water, not water vapour. The droplets often condense around dust particles.
No. Vapour does not smell.
The water vapour condensed on the windows. The vapour rising off the acid made me choke.
no
Any vapour is compressible.
Whi many are, many are not (iodine vapour is quite easily seen, for example, where water vapour is not).
Water vapor can flow because it is a gas, which means its molecules are not confined to a fixed position like in a solid or liquid. As a gas, water vapor has enough kinetic energy to move freely and fill the space available to it. This allows water vapor to flow and disperse throughout the air.
As the word "vapour" indicates, it is a gas.
As the reflux minimizes and heat energy remains to same that time sudden increase in pressure drop takes place. As the vapour flow is higher compared to liquid flow so liquid is unable to comes down through downcomer and flooding occurs......