It should be a barometer but then again I could be wrong, hope im right!
No. The temperature of air does not necessarily affect how much moisture it carries. Warm air, though, is capable of holding more moisture than cold air is.
The relative humidity of the air is a measure of how much moisture is in the air compared to the maximum amount of moisture the air can hold at a given temperature. It is expressed as a percentage and indicates how close the air is to reaching its saturation point.
The air that holds the most moisture in their air hole is warmer.
a lot of moisture
It tells you at what tempatures fog or dew on the grass will form.
If there is too much moisture in the air, the air will feel cold and damp.
humidity
If air is holding as much moisture as it can, colder air holds less than warmer.
Relative humidity is a measure of how much moisture is in the air relative to how much the air can hold. All the matters in the case of the latter is the air temperature. So if you cool the air temperature, the air can hold less moisture. Therefore, the air now has a larger percentage of moisture relative to what it can hold.
It measures how much moisture is in the air (humidity)
No. The temperature of air does not necessarily affect how much moisture it carries. Warm air, though, is capable of holding more moisture than cold air is.
saturated
saturated
When you say that there is moisture in the air it pretty much means water in the air.It is a physical change, as no new products have been formed.
Humidity - water vapor mixed with air - is drawn to the coolest surfaces, like windows. Cool air can't hold as much moisture as warm air so windows often collect this moisture and make it visible.
moisture is the mixture of cold air mixing with hot air pretty much like rain is formed
A hydrometer measures moisture in the air