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A desert cooler, also called a swamp cooler, depends on low humidity and evaporation to cool the air. It loses efficiency when the humidity is high, such as during the rainy season. Less water will evaporate when the air is already nearly saturated with water.
The desert (swamp) cooler depends upon evaporation of water for cooling. During the rainy season the air is already pretty much saturated with water vapor so little water evaporates from the cooler and they become inefficient. They are most efficient when the relative humidity is below 20%.
after rainy reason
If the water is staying clear there is no reason to shock it.
The sides of desert air cooler are filled with khas khas/ fine wood waste. A pump continuously keep this khas khas wet. The moisture from khas evaporates and creates cooling effect an this air is drawn into the room by cooler's fan. Now during rainy season the air outside is humid and it has less capacity to absorb water vapours so evaporation is less and so is cooling effect...by sarath sreerama
because of humidity
It is around 30 degrees C all year round. Rainy season is cooler (July-Sept)
Yes. Rain is pretty effective at melting snow.
water
True The California current - which starts off the coast of British Columbia, carries cooler water south along the Pacific coast - thus the water off the coast of California is cooler than that at comparable latitudes elsewhere. Combined with upwelling of cooler waters of the coast and the prevailing northwesterly winds, the moisture saturated air is pushed over the cold water and inland where it further cools. This is the mechanism that produces California's characteristic coastal fog and rain.
in rainy seansons..
On a rainy day, small oil films on water show brilliant colours. This is due to interference.