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Tossing Hot Water into Frigid Air

Tossing hot water into frigid air is an example of water changing states from liquid to gas (water vapor). In this video, water that has just boiled was tossed into frigid air (air temperature was -15 degrees F, windchill -32 degrees F and the dew point was -20 degrees F). The water was brought to a boil (thermal energy) so the molecules were close to the evaporation point (moving quickly). Hot water evaporates faster than cool water. When the water was tossed into the air, the water separated into smaller water droplets, allowing the frigid air to cool the water more quickly. The air is too cold to hold the water vapor (dry air) so the water condenses, making a cloud.

Location
Oelwein, Iowa

Driving Question

  • What happens to boiling water when you toss it into frigid air? Why?

Probing Questions

  • When is thermal energy being added and removed during this process?
  • Why does boiling water evaporate into frigid air?
  • Does the dew point affect the evaporation rate?  
  • What would happen if warm water was used instead of boiling water?
  • Why does the air temperature have to be very cold?

Classroom Suggestions

Students could:

  • Observe a similar teacher-lead investigation. Try tossing the boiling water on a variety of days with different temperatures and dew points. Have students record and compare observations.
  • Modify investigation with water at different temperatures or different liquids.

Resources

Iowa Core Alignment

MS-PS1-4:

Develop a model that predicts and describes changes in particle motion, temperature, and state of a pure substance when thermal energy is added or removed

Credit Info

Submitted by Jim Kelly

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