100%
humidity
Because the more pecentage of the Humidity the more saturated the air so clean air can get to you.
Relative humidity is reported in percentages. The percentage relates to the amount of water vapor air of a given temperature holds when it is saturated. So the humidity is reported as 50%, if the amount of water vapor in the air is half of what the air could hold at its current temperature.
It is measured in terms of percentage of humidity. A device to measure humidity is called hygrometer. The relative humidity of air can be measured by dry and wet bulb method.
The relative humidity percentage wil continue to rise until the dew point is achieved (100% relative humidity). This is when the proper pressure conditions are correct for the water particles in the air to accumulate causing the effect most know as "morning dew".
When a parcel of air is saturated with water vapor the relative humidity of that parcel of air is 100%.
100%
That would be "dewpoint"...When the air temperature falls to the dewpoint (or dewpoint rises to the air temperature), then you have 100% relative humidity.
warm
humidity
humidity
Saturated
When air is saturated at 30 degrees celsius
Air humidity measurements are based on the water content of the air, expressed as volume percentage: Relative Humidity = percentage of saturation at a given temperature Absolute Humidity = percentage of water in the air, regardless of saturation or temperature. The humidity that is talked about in weather reports, is relative humidity.
100% if it is completely saturated.
Because the more pecentage of the Humidity the more saturated the air so clean air can get to you.
This is called relative humidity. It is the ratio between the actual humidity, and the humidity for saturated air - that is, the maximum amount of water air can hold. This saturation point is dependent on temperature.