No, cold air can't hold as much as warm air, that's why clouds are up in the sky.
As the air gets warmer, it's ability to hold water vapor increases.
There is more water vapor present in the air when it is warmer because it is hotter and it causes more evaporating to occur and the liquid is turning into a gas.
Warmer air. :-)
Evaporation is faster at a higher temperature.
85...The warmer the temperature, the more water vapor it can hold.
No. Condensation will occur when they air gets cooler.
It may condense into clouds, or into precipitation, because cooler air cannot hold as much water vapor as warmer air.
This could be steam if you are heating water. Or fog when warm air crosses cooler ground or cool air crosses warmer ground.steam
it is already liquid if it is cooler water
cooler
Cooler. The cloud forms because the water vapor condenses by cooling down. Thunderstorms occur because a warm, moist air mass is cooled by an incoming cold air mass. When the moist air gets chilled, the water vapor condenses to form clouds, resulting in rain.
cooler
cooler
As the air gets warmer, it's ability to hold water vapor increases.
As the air gets warmer, it's ability to hold water vapor increases.
As the air gets warmer, it's ability to hold water vapor increases.
As the air gets warmer, it's ability to hold water vapor increases.