The dew point is the temperature below which, water vapor (at a constant pressure) will condense into liquid water.
frost will form on cold surfaces
No, precipitation is a separate process. Dew and frost occur when air cools to its dew point. Dew is condensation of water in the air onto a surface, while frost is the deposition of water vapor straight to ice.
relative humidity is 100 percent.
Condensation (cloud formation) will occur when dew point temperature equals ambient temperature.
As the dew point increases, the amount of water vapor in the air will increase. Dew points over 70 usually will indicate humid conditions and possible storms. Dew points in the 50s-60s usually will indicate fair/nice weather. Dew points below 50 will be very dry and pleasent. The dew point and the temperature are plugged into an equation to give you reletive humidity (how humid it is out).
Dew points are related to storms because the higher the dew point, the more likely it is that storms will develop. Dew points 70 and over indicate a better chance for storms.
Tornadoes most often occur in the spring an early summer as that is when the collisions of air masses of different temperatures and dew points are most violent and most like to produce severe thunderstorms.
take me to the site to register my dew points "i earned"
Dew point.
5.5
frost will form on cold surfaces
Condensation occurs at dew point temperature which is "the temp. at which first dew from vapours is formed when we are decreasing the temp. of the vapours".
5.5
No, precipitation is a separate process. Dew and frost occur when air cools to its dew point. Dew is condensation of water in the air onto a surface, while frost is the deposition of water vapor straight to ice.
relative humidity is 100 percent.
It is the point when water vapour condenses to form water droplets.
Frost.