Almost everyone “knows” that steam is visible. After all, one can see the cloud of white issuing from the spout of a boiling tea kettle. In reality, steam is the gaseous phase of water and is invisible. What you see is light scattered from the tiny droplets of water that are the result of the condensation of the steam as its temperature falls below 100 °C (under standard conditions).

1.
A. P.
Gage
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Introduction to Physical Science
(
Ginn & Company
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Boston
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1887
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