Andrew Mason said:
Right. So long as there is water around, there will be water vapour in the air. It contributes to the air pressure (ie. P = NRT where N is the number of water molecules/unit volume).
1. and 2. Steam is not a precise term. Steam usually refers to water vapour at greater than 100 deg. C. produced by boiling water. Water will evaporate at less than 100 deg, of course, but one doesn't ususally refer to that water vapour as steam. For example, on a humid day we don't say that the air is full of steam.
3 the cloud of condensed water droplets is NOT steam or water vapour. It is liquid water in fine droplet form. I don't know if there is a name for them.
AM
Hmm, for what you said about #3, I agree that there doesn't seem to be specific name for them, although I guess clouds, mist, fog, etc. are all manifestations of that phenomenon right? (Although high altitude clouds can be made up of ice crystals and not water droplets, which makes sense to me, since it's damn cold up there.)
I understand what you said about #2 since a vapour is just "the gaseous state of a substance that is normally in a liquid or solid state" (one definition I've seen, anyway). So in that case, water vapour is just a name for gaseous H
2O, case closed.
I agree that steam is an everyday term and is therefore not very precise. But I don't really understand why people here insist on saying that steam is synonymous with water vapour, that which happens to be produced by water boiling at 100 degrees celsius. They therefore go on to claim that since water vapour is colourless, so is steam, and so we can't see it. That statement seems a bit silly to me. Think of the most common contexts for the description: steam. A kettle, and the original topic: the stuff that fills the room when you take a shower. If steam is just water vapour, which cannot be seen, then what the heck is that stuff coming out of the kettle that everyone seems to be calling steam? Do you see my point? "Steam" seems to refer to what you
can see in both of those contexts, i.e. steam is the "cloud" of condensed water droplets formed when water vapour at 100 C from boiling water hits the colder surroundings. So, doesn't it make more sense to classify steam as a #3 than a #2? Just wondering...
Either that or AM's definition of steam is strictly correct, and the whole world's use of the word steam on an everyday basis is just erroneous.
