nope.
The amount stays the same but some of it changes to steam and water vapour and it will disappear.
Relative humidity is the ratio of the partial pressure of water vapour to the saturation vapour pressure of water at the same temperature. Relative humidity depends on temperature and the pressure. Very roughly speaking, it is a ratio of the amount of water vapour in the air compared to the total amount of water vapour that it possible for that air to contain.
The percentage of nitrogen remains the same as the amount of oxygen that was used was replaced by the water vapour and carbon dioxide
Relative humidity compares the amount of water vapour present in the air with the amount of water vapour that would be present in the same air at saturation. Specific humidity is the mass of water vapour present per kg of total air.
The ratio of relative humidity (RH) is a measure of the amount of water vapor present in the air compared to the maximum amount of water vapor the air can hold at a specific temperature. It is typically expressed as a percentage. For example, if the RH is 50%, it means the air is holding half of the maximum amount of water vapor it can hold at that temperature. RH plays a crucial role in weather forecasting, agriculture, and indoor comfort levels.
Physical change from liquid to vapour. The water remains chemically the same whether liquid or vapour.
Because people doesn't same everywhere. it is a rule of nature everything will be change according to human even water.
Relative Humidity is the ratio of the mass of vapour present in a certain volume of air to the mass of water vapour required to saturate the same volume of air at the same temperature. Another way of defining relative humidity is related to dew point. I.e relative humidity=s.v.p at dew point over s.v.p at air temperature multiply by 100%. And dew point is dependent upon prevalent atmospheric conditions like TEMPERATURE,wind and the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere.
Mass does since it is the amount of matter in an object and it is the same everywhere. Weight is the amount of gravity force on the object, so it changes on a different planet.
both are measures of how much water vapour is in the air
always the refractive index of water is same.....
No,very much so different:Condensation makes water vapour into waterEvaporation turns water into gas