As air temperature drops, it is able to hold less water. If the air temperature continues to drop after the relative humidity reaches 100%, dew forms (or frost, if it's cold enough).
capacity to absorb/distribute heat :)
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).
depends on the temperature outside
As the temperature of the air increases, water gets evaporated and hence the water content (humidity) decreases. As temperature reduces the temperature of the water vapour also reduces and it cannot maintain it's gaseous form so undergoes a phase transition to a liquid, or even straight to ice, which happens more readily at cold surfaces ('frost). The temperature is called the 'dew point'. At a microscopic level the process is rather more complex than that, quite interesting and counter intuitive.
The temperature decrease and water can be transformed in ice.
It changes and stuff.
capacity to absorb/distribute heat :)
1st it "changes" into water, and if heated long enough, at high enough temperature, it "changes" to steam, then, it eventually evaporates.
The density changes.
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).
false
the body temperature changes because of its surroundings
it makes warmth
The temperature increase a bit.
depends on the temperature outside
it changes