because of a warm day and we can see our breath on a cold day
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.
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.
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.
When you blow on a mirror, the warm air from your breath does not create a visible effect on the mirror. However, if the mirror is fogged up from steam or moisture, blowing on it can help clear the fog and reveal the reflection underneath.
We can feel infrared radiation as heat, but we can't see it with our eyes because it's not within the visible spectrum. This type of radiation is often emitted by warm objects or the sun.
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.
The warm water vapour in your breath condenses into water droplets when it hits the cold air.
It seems to point to the fact that you think your mother does not care about you.
When warm breath meets cold air, condensation may occur, leading to the formation of water droplets or frost. This is why you can sometimes see your breath in the cold.
carbon dioxide as a gas
oxygen ( or air )
Because when you breath warm air comes from inside you so the heat will show on the cold. Also called condensation
When you exhale in cold weather, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside and condenses into tiny water droplets. This condensation creates the visible cloud or mist that you see when you breathe out in the cold.
Your breath is substantially colder than the outside air... when your warm breath suddenly is immersed in that cold air, it forms condensation.
Physical. What's actually visible is not "breath", but rather the moisture in the breath condensing in the colder air. This is a change in physical state from vapor to liquid (in the form of tiny droplets), so it is a physical change.
because when you breath out carbon dioxide its kind of like dry ice. since your breath is always warm, carbon dioxide turns onto steam like when you put dry ice in water.
When you exhale on a cold morning, the warm air from your lungs meets the cold air outside. This temperature difference causes the water vapor in your breath to condense into tiny water droplets, creating a visible mist or cloud. This phenomenon is known as condensation.