Warm air rises (due to being less dense). This creates a 'void' which is filled by cold air moving in to fill the 'space'. The process creates what we feel as wind.
sea breeze
because the hot air push up and the cold air go in that area
technically hot air does not really rise it is the cold air that sinks below it because it is more dense.
Hot air rises, so is lighter than cold air.
Weather is determined by the movement of masses in the atmosphere. There are cold and hot air masses, and depending on the season and other factors determines the weather.
sea breeze
Winds blowing is the effect of change in the temperature in the air. Since hot air is lighter than cold air, hot air develops from cold air nearer above ground, and when it's hot enough, it becomes lighter and rises up. Cold air stays nearer to the ground and the force of hot air coming up and cold air staying put forms winds. If the winds are big that means the change of temperature is big too.
Air can be either cold or hot.
It's the change in air temperature. Cold air heats up and becomes hot air and rises up since hot air is lighter than cold air. The other cold air stays nearer to the ground and that is what causes the winds to blow.
Yes. There is such thing as hot air and cold air
I believe that weather is changed due to the movement of air pressure. High pressure (hot) Low Pressure (cold)
because the hot air push up and the cold air go in that area
Hot air rises and cold air falls.
Both. Since hot air is less dense than cold air, the hot air rises as the cold air falls (i.e. as the cold air displaces the hot air). If you were to dye hot air & then inject it into the center of a room, you would observe the dyed hot air rising. What you may not realize is that gravity draws the (invisible) surrounding dense cold air downwards as it displaces the (visible) less dense dyed hot air. === Previous Posters Answer: Hot air rises
You need to change your thermostat in the car.
what is the diffrence in hot and cold air particles
Cold air is compact air Hot air is less dense than cold air Ergo, hot air rises ; cold air sinks