Temperature is affected by elevation because of the density of the air and oxygen. Therefore, as you go higher there is less air to contain the heat, so its colder higher. For example, when you use a can of compressed air, the can becomes colder as the air is released because there is more room in the can for the molecules to move around without crashing into each other.
As you rise higher oxygen becomes more and more scarce.
The higher up in elevation, the colder the air is.
climate is affected by elevation because the change in climate due to altitude
No; temperature is affected by other factors such as elevation and proximity to an ocean.
pray and findout
Mixing and temperature elevation
the adrenal glands
Yes. It is called adiabatic heating & cooling.
air pressure
air pressure
climate is affected by elevation because the change in climate due to altitude
As a general rule in the atmosphere, the higher the elevation the lower the temperature. However, certain atmospheric conditions may produce an 'inversion', where temperature increases with elevation.
Temperature decreases as the elevation increases.
No; temperature is affected by other factors such as elevation and proximity to an ocean.
Density isn't affected by elevation. Density = Mass/Volume Therefore elevation has no factor in density.
As the altitude or elevation increases the temperature decreases. The temperature drops about 6.5 degree Celsius for every I km increase.
The relationship between elevation and climate has to do with temperature. The higher up the elevation is the colder the temperature is.
In the troposphere, the temperature drops. In the stratosphere (layer above the troposphere) it increases with elevation. In the mesosphere, temperature drops again with elevation. In the theromosphere, it goes up again (to nearly stellar surface temperatures).
equivalent noise temperature; elevation angle