It's the other way round - when air becomes warm, it rises.
Warm air rises,and then sinks when the air is cold.
Warm air rises because it is less dense than colder air. As gases get warmer they expand that the molecules become farther apart causing it to become less dense and therefore, lighter per unit squared, this is why it rises.
it gets warmer as it rises
it gets warmer as it rises
it gets warmer as it rises
it gets warmer as it rises
As the warm air rises and moves toward the poles,cooler air moves from the poles toward the equator to replace it. Resource:Factors of Weather:Air movement Close to the Earth (science sheet)
Lol, no it doesn't, ..it gets colder as it rises.
Warm air rises at the equator and cold air sinks at the poles. Warm air expands and cool air contracts and compresses.
Yes! Warm air is less dense, which is why warm air rises. Cold air is more dense so that's why it sinks.
Warm air rises above cold air because it is less dense than cold air. As warm air absorbs heat, its molecules gain energy and spread out, causing it to become lighter and rise. This creates convection currents, with warm air moving upward and cold air sinking to take its place.
yes the cool denser air sink while the warm less dense rises