Weather, but Meteorology is the study of what you said.
weather
which term refers to the day to day changes in temperature wind speed and precipitation
Weather is the term for changes in atmospheric temperature. Season is the term for the length of days.
Weather is the condition of the atmosphere at a particular time: it includes TEMPERATURE, PRESSURE, MOISTURE, and others like dewpoint temp and relative humidity.
All three contain some type of gas.
Weather
weather
Weather, but Meteorology is the study of what you said.
which term refers to the day to day changes in temperature wind speed and precipitation
Weather is the term for changes in atmospheric temperature. Season is the term for the length of days.
temperature:how hot or cold it is precipitation:it is rain snow hail or sleet
The abiotic refers to the non-living. The abiotic factors of the environment include light, temperature, wind patterns, precipitation, and atmospheric gases.
The abiotic refers to the non-living. The abiotic factors of the environment include light, temperature, wind patterns, precipitation, and atmospheric gases.
"Precipitation" refers to "falling out". In a chemical reaction, precipitation refers to a process where liquid or dissolved chemicals react to form another compound which is insoluble, and solid "flakes" of the compound "fall out" of the solution and settle to the bottom. In meteorology, "precipitation" refers to water "falling out" of the clouds as rain or snow.
Precipitation is when the solid water in the clouds turns into liquid. Precipitation can come in rain, snow, sleet, or hail. If the temperature near the ground is cold, snow, sleet, and hail all occur.
Precipitation refers to any form of water - liquid or solid - falling from the atmosphere, like rain, snow, sleet, or hail. It is a vital component of the Earth's water cycle, playing a role in maintaining the balance of water on the planet. Factors influencing precipitation include temperature, air pressure, humidity, and wind patterns.
Mercury's precipitation refers to the wetting of a particular glass by mercury. The mercury in this form is usually easily removed from the glass by scrubbing.