Vapour in a sentence as a noun

More water vapour + more carbon = more life. Here's a thought, C3 plant life goes extinct if CO2 falls below ~200ppm.

Water vapour is by FAR the biggest greenhouse gas. I wonder if a 787 burns more hydrocarbons flying 250 people from NY to LA than 250 cars driving that distance?

Also, "disappeared": what it ends up breaking down into is carbon dioxide and water vapour, both greenhouse gases in their own right.

It's 'just' a couple of scrolling images for the vertical and horizontal vapour, and a rotating image for the swirl where they meet. Very effective indeed.

The problem is that it's cold up there, so the vapour pressure in a cartridge of liquified gas is much lower, and the flame in your stove is pretty marginal.

And then the water vapour is also recycled and repurified back into the system. So it's a closed water system powered by solar energy inputs.

This is actually due to the low amount of water - very little of the greenhouse gas water vapour to keep the heat from radiating into space.

So you're equating somebody expelling water vapour laced with minute quantities nicotine with the phrases "drugging everyone near them" and "force someone to take a drug"? Way to ratchet up the rhetoric.

Semi-offtopic: water vapour is by far the most powerful atmospheric greenhouse gas per unit volume and as a whole, many times more 'powerful' than CO2. Hardly anyone mentions it because it is not something we can change.

It may even create more clouds - the same amount of water makes more cloud than ice - but it's a complex picture, and warm air can hold a **** of a lot of water in invisible vapour form.

The "smoke" from e-cigarettes is just vapour, and no more harmful to the people around the user than steam from a kettle. However, there's a discussion to be had here, and it's possibly more important than the one surrounding cigarettes and second-hand smoke.

In a vacuum, however, surface tension goes away -- liquid water at an interface with vacuum will boil, and all of a sudden you've got water vapour filling your nice evacuated tube through every microscopic crack in its five thousand mile length. Nasty.

> So no, it's not just 'vapour' and you've got no right to try and convince people otherwise because you are, ultimately, a junkie justifying your addiction. Strong perfume is also not just vapour and can be downright annoying, especially for someone who is allergic.

The vapour is primarily/exclusively propylene glycol. Stating that it's the active ingredient in a household cleaner is a bit disingenious, I think.

The issues I'm seeing are: no insulation, no interior framing for drywall and vapour barrier, no exterior framing for sheathing, insulation, building wrap or siding material. No plumbing, gas lines, wiring or ductwork.

However the narrative among the Apple camp was that competitors were desperately rushing to deliver vapour, and that their stodgy square mega watches were non-starters. Yes, Android had dynamic layout before iOS. And?

I used to work at the stations mentioned, we had big signs on the nearby highway pointing out that the "smoke" coming out of the towers was just water vapour. The actual pollution was generally pretty hard to spot thanks to various ash and particulate collection methods in action, that is unless one of the boilers was being restarted and diesel was being burnt, in which case the smoke was quite black and visible.

Devices producing lots of vapour will give off a smell, while less vapour has less of a smell. The smell each juice gives off is similar to the taste and dissipates really quickly. The flavours in my devices are currently "honeydew melon" and "tobacco+caramel" which has a caramel-ly smell. As long as someone isn't blowing the vapour directly in your face you'll either barely notice, or it'll be like walking by someone that's wearing perfume or aftershave.

This is the huge advantage of an electronic cigarettte, it deals with both aspects; it does so a lot better than those nicotine "inhalers" that they have because of the look & feel of them and the appearance of the vapour they produce. The downside to all nicotine replacement therapies is that nicotine is a pretty bad irritant; you can't wear a patch in the same place two days in a row and the gum can cause really sore throats and even mess with your digestive system.

Practical boat owner is good magazine to find out about this kind of stuff in the UK. Insulation is a bit tricky because the water vapour generated by breathing and washing etc will condense on the inside of the metal shell\nof the vehicle, potentially causing problems with corrosion, mould growth and rot in any organic elements. Ideally you would seal up the bus, put in plenty of insulation and have mechanical ventilation with heat recovery. Choosing the correct insulation and making it vapour tight or ventilating the cold side is the hard part.

I don't think graphine oxide would be as applicable in the near future since these experiments use water vapour and pass it through the membrane, meaning that you already need to expand energy to heat up all that water, and there already exist more efficient methods of desalinization.

Vapour definitions

noun

a visible suspension in the air of particles of some substance

See also: vapor

noun

the process of becoming a vapor

See also: vaporization vaporisation vapor evaporation