Water molecules escape from the fluid phase into the gas phase and become 'vapor'
(that how the gas phase is mentioned, so the words: 'gas vapor' are a bit 'double' in meaning about the same!).
It is not necessarily to happen at boiling temperature (100o Celsius), fluid water also evaporises at lower temperatures (e.g. room temp. or even lower).
Water vapor or steam, no big chemical reaction though, just H2O in it's gaseous state.
None. Water is simply being changed from its liquid state to that of a gas. But water vapor is simply very small water particles full of energy and thus free floating in the air.
The gases in the bubbles in boiling water is steam.
steam
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
Water is vapor or steam at 213 0F at normal pressures.
Water vapor is simply water in the form of a gas. Liquid water turns into water vapor through a process called evaporation.
well water vapor is a gas that is fueling the car with gas I LOVE SCIENCE
Water vapor is water in the form of a gas.
when water vapors it cause it to steam up and then it turns to gas.
No. That is vaporization. Condensation is when a gas changes into a liquid.
Water boils at 100 and turns into a gas (steam)
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
when water boils the molecules will get a bigger space inbetween them, which forms a gas (water vapor), when you cool down wator vapor the molecules will get closer together and form a liquid (water)
Water vapor (steam) is inside the bubbles that form inside boiling water. The bubbles that form prior to boiling are mostly dissolved gases escaping from the water.
Water is vapor or steam at 213 0F at normal pressures.
Water vapor and carbon dioxide. Water vapor is the most abundant.
When a gas (vapor) changes to the liquid phase, it is called condensation.
When water boils, the entire volume of water can produce vapor. In contrast, when water evaporates, only molecules at the surface can escape into the gas phase.
Steam. Not to be confused with vapor, which is a suspension of liquid water molecules in another gas.