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by pdonis 963 days ago
> They observed evaporation of clusters of molecules, not individual molecules. Since whole groups of molecules are flung into the air, not all of the intermolecular bonds need to be broken for them to evaporate. Heat from the air is later used to break those clusters apart into individual molecules.

This sounds more like the light is making thin fog, not water vapor.

1 comments

Well, sort of. I’m conceptualizing it as an intermediate state between a vapor and an aerosol. The aerosol would have way more intermolecular bonds per molecule on average since most of its molecules are in the insides of droplets. But these molecule clusters have all or almost all their molecules exposed on the clusters surface, so they have many fewer intermolecular bonds.