*1. The height of the point of condensation/100*1 *2. The height of the mountain-the height of the point of condensation *3. The answer above/100*0.6 4*. The temperature at sea level - (*1.+*3.)
the temperature gets lower as you get higher. That'swhy there is ice caps on top of the mountain.
Wind is blowing air up over the mountain. Going from about 1,000 feet at the base to 7,000 feet at the top, the temperature changes as the air goes over the mountain.
it is lower temperature when you to mountain,because its cold there
The speed of sound depends only on the temperature of the gas for an ideal gas. This implies that the ambient pressure on top of a mountain doesn't affect the propagation of sound in air. So the speed of sound should be larger in hot desert air compared to cold air on a mountain top.
It doesn't. Pressure is lower at the top of a mountain because there is less air weighing down on top of it.
the temperature gets lower as you get higher. That'swhy there is ice caps on top of the mountain.
the temperature gets lower as you get higher. That'swhy there is ice caps on top of the mountain.
Because mountain is a higher and the air is top and right and left of a mountain.🙂
That depends on air temperature.
At the top of the mountain you feel more colder than the normal temperature.
You would need to know how high the mountain is and what the temperature is at the bottom...
Wind is blowing air up over the mountain. Going from about 1,000 feet at the base to 7,000 feet at the top, the temperature changes as the air goes over the mountain.
pressure
No, it isn't. Vinson Massif in Antarctica is the coldest mountain in the world with a record temperature of −128.6 °F.
top of mountain
Sorry- no one mountain, no one temperature. Today at the top of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia it was a lovely 75 degrees F. At the top of Mt. Everest it is about -25 degrees F.
The temperature at sea level is 20 degrees celsius. What is the temperature at the top of a mountain 3000 m above sea level? Decrease of temperature with height: 6.5 Kelvin per km to about 11 km altitude. That is for a height of 3 km = 3000 m about 6.5 times 3 = 19.5 degrees colder than the ground. So if at ground it is 20°C, at the top of the mountain (3000 m) it will be about 0°C.