No, it will not any moisture. If you go down from high temperatures to low, then at so called dew point you will have some moisture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dew_point
oil is bad for you so dont eat it the real answer is it evapotates! is this for a study sheet? or DAILY GEO?????
No, in fact, the opposite is true. Warm air can hold more water vapour than cold air.
Cold air mostly, it has more moisture because it's cold, cold makes water. Both types of air can contain moisture but cold are is more likely to.
Yes it does. which is why as it rises into the cooler upper atmosphere it will start to rain.
Not necessarily. However, warm air has the ability to contain more moisture (absolute humidity) than cold air before it gets saturated (reaches 100% relative humidity).
warm air
Warm air.
The higher you go, the colder it gets. The colder it gets, the less water vapor can remain in the air. That's the reason it rains on the windward side of mountain ranges. Warm, moist air gets pushed up and the rain condenses.
it gets warmer
Warm, Moist air
The cold water molicules (or ice molicules) abosorb the heat of the drink and begin to move faster. however the drink is not warm enough for the drink to melt the ice cubes completely. the over all effect is that all of the molicules in the drink slow down thus becoming colder.
It melts.What's wrong with you are you crazy, you should you know what happens to snow when it gets warm!? F*** you
The higher you go, the colder it gets. The colder it gets, the less water vapor can remain in the air. That's the reason it rains on the windward side of mountain ranges. Warm, moist air gets pushed up and the rain condenses.
Because colder air is forcing it upward.
A cold front forms. The warm, moist air, which is less dense, gets forced upwards. As it rises it cools and the moisture in it condenses. This results in rain and possibly thunderstorms.
Lol, no it doesn't, ..it gets colder as it rises.
The closing up of a vent terminal do to warm moist vapors touching the sides of a colder surface
It gets colder. And the energy increases so the particles move further apart.
in the lower atmosphere the air gets colder with increasing altitude.
It gets Colder. SK(APEX)
Tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms, which get their energy from relatively warm, moist air. In the winter the air is colder and does not have as much energy.
the air gets colder at night and it cant hold the humidity it could while it was warm
The dog gets warm. :)
Condensation