On a hot day, the warm temperature of the air prevents condensation from forming when you exhale, so you won't see your breath. When you can see your breath, it's because the warm, moist air you exhale is meeting cooler air, causing the moisture to condense into droplets that are visible.
On a warm day, the air temperature is likely higher than your body temperature, so when you exhale, the warm air quickly mixes with the surrounding air and dissipates. This prevents the condensation of water vapor in your breath, which is what makes it visible on colder days.
This happens because the warm air from the person's breath hits the cold surface of the glass, causing the water vapor in the air to condense into tiny droplets that appear as a faint white mist.
You see your breath on a cold day because when you exhale, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside. This causes the water vapor in your breath to condense into tiny droplets, making it visible as mist or fog.
When warmer air comes into contact with the cold surface of the ice, it causes condensation of water vapor in the air, forming tiny water droplets that appear as mist or fog on the surface of the ice. This effect is similar to what happens when you see your breath on a cold day.
by itself many scientists figured out that light travels by itself you can see light moving you cant touch it and cant hear it same with oxygen. oxygen is always around us we breath it and sometimes see it
It seems to point to the fact that you think your mother does not care about you.
carbon dioxide as a gas
oxygen ( or air )
hot dog breath
The reason you can see your breath in cold weather is because the water vapor in your breath is condensing (condensation). You can't see it in hot weather because condensation can't occur in warmer weather.
I cant because I cant see or touch your cell phone
The warm water vapour in your breath condenses into water droplets when it hits the cold air.
On a warm day, the air temperature is likely higher than your body temperature, so when you exhale, the warm air quickly mixes with the surrounding air and dissipates. This prevents the condensation of water vapor in your breath, which is what makes it visible on colder days.
if it is 32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius, than when you breathe out the water in your breath condenses in the air
good qeustion!there so bright that in the day you cant see them!there accaully still there!
NO!!! They just cant see in the dark, they can in day
because at night they cant see =]