when the freely following particles of the steam touches the cold surface it changes into water vapor or fogg
When you blow onto a mirror, the warm, moist air from your breath creates condensation on the cool surface of the mirror. This condensation forms tiny water droplets that scatter light and cause the mirror to appear foggy.
Blowing air onto a mirror can cause condensation to form on its surface, which can make the reflection appear blurry or distorted. This occurs because the moisture in the air condenses on the cooler surface of the mirror, affecting the way light is reflected and thus making the image unclear.
Oh, dude, if you blow on a mirror, you'd see the mirror fog up because your warm, moist breath hits the cool surface and condenses into tiny water droplets. It's like when you're trying to impress someone with your hot air but end up just creating a foggy mess. Just wipe it off and try not to fog up any more mirrors with your hot takes.
The mirror get "moisturized" when you blow on it since your breath has water vapors in it. Once you breathe or blow onto the mirror, the water vapors from your mouth go onto the mirror and cool down, causing it to look like a cloudy surface.
No. In a room with any number of mirrors of any size, when you switch off the light or blow out the candle, the room becomes just as dark as a room without mirrors.
When you blow air on a mirror, the warm, moist air from your breath comes into contact with the cooler surface of the mirror. This causes the water vapor in the breath to cool and condense into tiny droplets, forming a foggy layer on the mirror's surface. This phenomenon is similar to how dew forms on grass in the morning when warm air meets cooler surfaces.
When you blow onto a mirror, the warm, moist air from your breath creates condensation on the cool surface of the mirror. This condensation forms tiny water droplets that scatter light and cause the mirror to appear foggy.
Blowing air onto a mirror can cause condensation to form on its surface, which can make the reflection appear blurry or distorted. This occurs because the moisture in the air condenses on the cooler surface of the mirror, affecting the way light is reflected and thus making the image unclear.
Blow by or blow past is leakage of combustion gas between ring and liner surface. It may happe due to wear of liner surface. Causes for it: lubrication fail, suffing, older engine etc.
A volcano erupts when magma below the surface becomes presured and makes its way up the volcano until it can't go any further and sits and builds pressure until it blow with extreme power
Oh, dude, if you blow on a mirror, you'd see the mirror fog up because your warm, moist breath hits the cool surface and condenses into tiny water droplets. It's like when you're trying to impress someone with your hot air but end up just creating a foggy mess. Just wipe it off and try not to fog up any more mirrors with your hot takes.
Because the Earth rotates.
It weakens the surface tension of water allowing us to blow BUBBLES!! :D
It weakens the surface tension of water allowing us to blow BUBBLES!! :D
The amplitude is increased by strong surface winds.
their difference is very simple. surface blowdown valve is for light impurities while bottom blowdown valve is for heavy impurities such as sludge, etc.
Not much unless you do it A LOT.