Vapor comes from the water's steam so therefore, plain water is colder IF it is room temperature or colder. It obviously wouldn't be colder if it was boiling.
The warmer the temperature, the more water vapor in the air. The colder the temperature, the less water vapor in the air.
colder air doesn't collect as much water vapor
it is warmer
colder
A liquid boils when the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the atmospheric pressure. The presence of salt in the water reduces the vapor pressure of the water at the temperature at which plain or distilled water will boil. Since the temperature of the salt water must be higher to reach the same vapor pressure as the atmosphere, it takes longer to boil.
it would have to get colder for the water molucules to shrink and more to come in and it woluld allow more space
precipitation condensation and rain
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.
Yes, warm air can hold more water (in the form of water vapor) than colder air.
Cooler. The cloud forms because the water vapor condenses by cooling down. Thunderstorms occur because a warm, moist air mass is cooled by an incoming cold air mass. When the moist air gets chilled, the water vapor condenses to form clouds, resulting in rain.
The earth would be much colder. These are greenhouse gases.
The Earths surface would be much colder than it is.