The boiling point of water is dependent on pressure, air pressure is not uniform even at sea level which is why evaporation happens in the first place.
I'll give you an example, when air is heated and a large parcel of heated air floats upward due to being less dense than the cooler air surrounding it, it lowers atmospheric pressure lowering the boiling point of water. This can happen at sea level.
Think surface area. The entire Atlantic Ocean is fucking big, you can have an area 100 football fields in length create a pressure drop that boils off a 1 micron thick layer of water you still have a couple gallons of air saturated with steam, ie boiling water.
You have to be trolling me. Your statements just keep getting more and more absurd.
Basic high school physics states that something evaporates or dissolves into another medium because said medium isn't saturated at it's given temperature.
When the humidity is 100 percent, the air is saturated with water. No more water can evaporate.
Well the difference between us is that you keep looking at things from a basic high school level, I'm trying to step your game up.
No, you're trolling me. You don't have any knowledge of steam beyond the fact that you've seen a kettle boil.
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