Warm air rises because it is less dense than colder air. As gases get warmer they expand that the molecules become farther apart causing it to become less dense and therefore, lighter per unit squared, this is why it rises.
the warm air rises because of its Kinetic energy !
When warm moist air rises it cools and condenses.
No. Warm air rises because its warmth causes it to rise. The act of forcing air upwards will warm the air slightly because of friction, but the act alone of air rising does not raise the temperature of the air.
No, warm air is lighter than cold air because hot air rises and cold air stays in the same place.
Well, warm air rises and cool air sinks! Your welcome! :) <3
the warm air rises because of its Kinetic energy !
Because warm air is less dense then cool air.
Conduction
When warm moist air rises it cools and condenses.
rise because of it's density
No. Warm air rises because its warmth causes it to rise. The act of forcing air upwards will warm the air slightly because of friction, but the act alone of air rising does not raise the temperature of the air.
Warm air rises,and then sinks when the air is cold.
It's the other way round - when air becomes warm, it rises.
Warm air always rises.
The space between the molecules in the air mixture increases which decreases the density of the air. As the density decreases, the mass of warm air rises.
"Warm air", otherwise known as Hot Air Balloons, float because of one basic Law of Thermodynamics; heat rises. The air in a hot air balloon is hot, therefore, the balloon rises.
it gets warmer as it rises