Hi fisico,
glad you liked my reply, even though it may have appeared a bit exotic. Several comments of mine on your previous post:
- I think that supercritical CO2 with a density like liquid will look like liquid while supercritical CO2 with a density of gas will look like gas. "Supercritical" does not -to my knowledge- constrain the densities. In fact, I don't even think that the term has a very precise meaning (as mentioned in my previous post). If the CO2 used for decaffeination happens to have the density of liquid water (at standard pressure), then it may well look like it. If you are really interested in this particular process, then perhaps you should see if you can find the actual density of the CO2 being used. Since Wikipedia sais something about "keeping the favorable density of liquid", I guess it will indeed have a typical liquid density.
- High densities and low densities look different, of course. In first approximation, a gas looks more tranparent since it absorbs less light. I don't see how liquid and gas have different structures (except for the different density, of course).
- It is well possible that other properties also undergo a huge change at the liquid-gas phase transition alongside with the density (those that are directly related to density, for example). However, the same reasoning why liquid and gas are not that different that applied to density also applies to them. If it didn't, the phase transition would not end in a critical point.
- Note that what people usually conceive as "water vapor" is actually "steam", i.e. water vapor that has risen from your cook-pot and condensed into tiny droplets of liquid water.
- Fog is small droplets of liquid. Structurally the same as steam, just not as hot. Raindrops are just larger droplets (and in particular sufficiently large such that gravity becomes the dominant force that acts on them).
- The similarity of liquid and gas is somewhat abstract and fundamental and does not play out well in everyday experience. There, pressures are usually constrained withing a small interval around standard pressure, and it is highly unlikely for a random substance to have its critical point within this pressure interval. The critical point of water (the most important liquid) is at 200 times the standard pressure. So in practice, you can can think of liquid water and gaseous water as being fundamentally different in most cases.