SATURATED
I think you are refering to "dew".
You can see water vapour in the air, as when a kettle or pan boils, or when you breathe out into cold air. It depends on the temperature balance between the vapour and the surrounding air.
Yes. The process is called condensation, and it's driven by the fact that the temperature of the air decides how much moisture it can carry. Warm air, the water stays as vapour. Then the warm air hits the cold can, the air cools off, can't carry as much moisture anymore and the excess ends up on the can as droplets.
the heated air inside of the balloon has less density than the cold outside air so the hot air is more buoyant (e.g. the bowling ball sinks but the beach ball floats because the density of the beach ball is less than the water)
A warm air mass and a cold air mass holds the same amount water vapor but the air mass is smaller
no, warm air holds more water vapour than cold air
Warm air holds more moisture than cold air. In warm weather, there is increased evaporation of sea water.
The warm air mass
Warm air is lighter and therefore rises. Cold air holds more water and is heavier. Cold air sinks lower than warm air.
Hot air.
warm air hold more water vapor...unless it doesnt like sandwiches between its toes at 5 o'clock in the after noon
warm
I can't what til fall
because of percipitation
nothing "happens" 2 the water vapor. the vast amount of water vapor in the air on a humid day as exactly bcoz its so hot. the water is drawn out of sources which holds it. but when its cold that water isn't drawn out
Air pressure holds water in the air. When the pressure builds up and the air gets too saturated to hold any more moisture, then precipitation will occur.