condensation

Pakistan
October 4, 2006 12:22am CST
Condensation the conversion of water from a gas into a liquid is called condensation. Condensation is the change of water from its gaseous form (water vapor) into liquid water. Condensation generally occurs in the atmosphere when warm air rises, cools and looses its capacity to hold water vapor. As a result, excess water vapor condenses to form cloud droplets. The upward motions that generate clouds can be produced by convection in unstable air, convergence associated with cyclones, lifting of air by fronts and lifting over elevated topography such as mountains. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Convection atmospheric motions in the vertical direction In meteorology, convection refers primarily to atmospheric motions in the vertical direction. As the earth is heated by the sun, different surfaces absorb different amounts of energy and convection may occur where the surface heats up very rapidly. As the surface warms, it heats the overlying air, which gradually becomes less dense than the surrounding air and begins to rise. The bubble of relatively warm air that rises upward from the surface is called a "thermal". A simple demonstration of condensation through convection can be performed by placing a pot of water on a heated stove. The burner represents the heating of the earth's surface by the sun, while the water and the air above it represent the atmosphere. As the bottom of the pot (earth's surface) begins to heat the water (lower atmosphere), warmer and less dense water evaporates and rises (thermal) into the drier, colder air above the pot (middle atmosphere). This causes the thermals to cool and water vapor within to condense, forming a small cloud, or steam, that is visible above the pot of heated water. This same process occurs in the real atmosphere as the water vapor within rising thermals condenses to form a cloud, as occurred in the example shown above. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 response
@moneymind (10510)
• Philippines
4 Oct 06
good research. what now? greetings. : )