No. The temperature of air does not necessarily affect how much moisture it carries. Warm air, though, is capable of holding more moisture than cold air is.
Because on got day there is less moisture in air so, the clothes dry faster on a hot day than a cool day.
dry continental air masses.
On a dry day, water will evaporate from the wet bulb thermometer, cooling it. On a humid day, since moisture is already in the air, less will evaporate, and cool it less.
Continental Polar cP air mass is an air mass formed over land in a cold region with cold dry airMaritime tropical mT air mass is an air mass that forms over water in a warm region with warm wet air
Anticyclones can be bring cool air but are usually largely free of precipitation.
Yes. A wet animal will cool faster than a dry animal. The evaporation of the water removes heat from the body and cools it.
Because on got day there is less moisture in air so, the clothes dry faster on a hot day than a cool day.
Dry soil heats faster than Wet soil because water has a higher thermal inertia than air. Moist soil contains more water, and thus will heat and cool slower than soil mixed with air (dry soil) which has a lower thermal inertia.
A wet bulb measures the temperature after water evaporation allows to cool and a dry bulb measures air temperature.
Wet air has more water vapor than dry air.
Highlands are warm and dry during the summer, but, cool and wet, during the winter.
because air masses move around in comes like that
yes
No, They can be COLD, WET; COLD,DRY; WARM, WET; or WARM, DRY.
If you want to dry your plate faster use a clean cloth.
It grows faster on a wet substance because its spores reproduce.
In a tropical wet/dry climate there is hot summers and cool winters and there is dry summers and wet winters