On a hot day you sweat and on a cold day you don't.
Warmer air is able to hold more water vapour than cooler air. As warm humid air cools, the water vapour condenses out as water droplets.
It cools.
Increase
As snow falls it will evaporate if the surrounding air is drier, and the energy required to turn water or ice into a gas is taken from that air and the air cools. Eventually it cools to saturation, where the temperature and dew point are equal or very nearly so. This temperature - where the dew point and temperature "meet" if you increase the relative humidity to saturation - is the wet bulb temperature.
don't have a clue?!
"its not the heat , its the humidity" usually means it is the the humidity that cools your body temperature down .
Due to lack of humidity and cloud cover, the desert cools rapidly after sunset.
An a/c does not dehumidify, it cools the air. If you need less humidity get a room dehumidifier.
Increase in temperature makes us sweat. Normally when sweat evaporates it takes heat from body to evaporate and thus cools our body. But when humidity is high the sweat is not able to evaporate thus our body is not able to cool. In cold weather we will not experience this as body does not sweat.Thus increased temperature affects the amt of humidity we feel.
Warmer air is able to hold more water vapour than cooler air. As warm humid air cools, the water vapour condenses out as water droplets.
It cools.
Increase
As snow falls it will evaporate if the surrounding air is drier, and the energy required to turn water or ice into a gas is taken from that air and the air cools. Eventually it cools to saturation, where the temperature and dew point are equal or very nearly so. This temperature - where the dew point and temperature "meet" if you increase the relative humidity to saturation - is the wet bulb temperature.
As snow falls it will evaporate if the surrounding air is drier, and the energy required to turn water or ice into a gas is taken from that air and the air cools. Eventually it cools to saturation, where the temperature and dew point are equal or very nearly so. This temperature - where the dew point and temperature "meet" if you increase the relative humidity to saturation - is the wet bulb temperature.
During a cyclone, the air in the center of the storm rises, cools, and forms clouds that lead to rain. Anticyclones bring clear skies, low winds, and dry weather.
it compresses a gas (freon or something like it), which heats the gas. Then it cools the gas (radiator grill on the outside) Then it lets the gas expand ... which cools the gas ... which cools the inside air.
cools your lungs, skin, mouth, nostrils