That depends on what type of liquid created the steam. Obviously, different liquids have different evaporation, boiling, and melting points.
At the same temperature, water molecules have the same amount of energy, whether in the form of solid ice, liquid water, or gaseous steam. When cooled at this specific temperature, the kinetic energy of water molecules decreases, causing them to come closer together and form a solid (freeze) or a liquid (condense) depending on the initial state of the water.
Yes, water can condense at 0 degrees Celsius if the surrounding temperature drops below the dew point, which is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with water vapor. If the air is cooled further, the excess moisture will condense into liquid water.
In the case where heat is being added to generate steam from a container of water, as long as there is water still in the container, the temperature remains constant. It takes energy for water to change state into steam and all of the heat added goes to performing this task so the temperature stays the same, 212 degF (100 degC) at atmospheric pressure. While the water is boiling, the steam is "saturated," meaning any loss of heat would cause some of the steam to condense back into water. Once all of the water has been boiled and changed state, any additional heat supplied will cause the temperature to increase and the steam is "superheated," that is above its saturation temperature.
Actually, the temperature at which water vapor begins to condense into liquid water is called the dew point. It is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with moisture.
first its the heat boils the water then if you turn off the heat it starts cooling down that's what happensAnother AnswerAll matter exists in one of three states; Solid, Liquid, or Gas. Steam is waters' gaseous state. Steam is invisible. The cloudy puffs you see is water condensing back into liquid state. The steam is condensing because it is cooler out in the ambient air.
Either reduce its temperature or increase the pressure on it, and provide something on which the steam can condense.
When enough heat energy is gained by liquid water, it can change phase and turn into steam or vapor, transitioning from a liquid to a gaseous state. This process is known as evaporation or boiling, depending on the temperature reached.
When it is under 100 degrees celsius
To melt refers to the transformation from solid to liquid (think ice to water) To condense refers to the transformation from gas to liquid (think steam to water)
At the same temperature, water molecules have the same amount of energy, whether in the form of solid ice, liquid water, or gaseous steam. When cooled at this specific temperature, the kinetic energy of water molecules decreases, causing them to come closer together and form a solid (freeze) or a liquid (condense) depending on the initial state of the water.
Yes. It is the temperature at which a gas condenses into a liquid.
When steam turns to water, the particles lose energy and slow down, coming closer together. This causes the steam to condense into liquid water.
Water vapor condenses into liquid water at its dew point temperature.
condense
You can condense a liquid by putting in heat.
condense
32 Degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius Below this temperature H2O will remain in a solid form, above this temperature H2O will be in a liquid form.