It is actually and measurably warmer because its molecules are in motion relative to still air. It feels colder because it evaporates moisture off your skin. In hot, dry and windy conditions, if you get out of a swimming pool the wind will feel very cold right up to the point when you are dry, then suddenly you will get very HOT.
No, it is the same temperature. When the wind is light/still, the heat from your body causes a warm pocket of air to form around you. When the winds have a higher strength, this pocket of air is blown away, and hence you feel colder. This is known as wind chill.
as you go higher the air becomes thinner and colder until eventually you reach space where there is no air and it extremely cold
the cold air pushes the warm air up and forms cumulus clouds
The cold air will sink.
it is higher up
the air gets thinner.
Hot air hasLess atmospheric pressure, in other words the air is thinner. ... Cold air is heavier than hot air *at the same pressure*
When the cold front comes, the air mass gets lighter and thinner.
Yes, in hot air the air is a lot thinner so there is less resistance compared to cold air which is a lot denser so more resistance.
does the air get thinner at night in the UK
as you go higher the air becomes thinner and colder until eventually you reach space where there is no air and it extremely cold
Air does not cover space. Air is the atmosphere of the Earth and as you ho higher the air gets thinner and thinner.
Because the air is thinner and it's harder to get 'lift'
Yes, cold air masses are denser than warm air masses. The reason for this is because heat excites atoms so they take up more volume in space. Meaning they take up more volume of heat which leaves little warmth left and a lot of cold left. The warmth is thinner and vice versa, the cold is denser.
Since Denver is at a higher elevation than Milwaukee, the air is thinner. Thinner air has fewer molecules, so there is less friction as the ball flies through the air. Less friction means that the force will move the ball a longer distance.
"air" and/or "oxygen"
Thinner.
air is thinner