Warm water has more fog due to great humidity
warm air and cold air gets together and make fog
cold air
i won't say it
Because it is both cold and humid, and the sun partly evaporates water into the air, while the cold air pushes it down, creating fog.
Well, when i go outside in the fog I would think it was more of a warm feeling than cold, I know that fog is just clouds and when it gets very humid outside there is almost always fog. So I hope that answers your question.......
Fog
Steam fog.
warm air and cold air gets together and make fog
Upon entering the warm building, the warm air around your cold glasses condense to form miniscule water droplets that will cloud your vision.
Yes, they will, because of the sudden change in temperature, a chemical reaction occurs, making the sunglasses fog.
Mostly warm and sunny, but sometimes cold and wet. Fog is common, but more often smog.
cold air
It's a form of fog sometimes called steam fog. Cold air over relatively warm water (any water in liquid form is warm relative to air at that temperature) will cause the air at the water-air interface to become saturated and cool to its dewpoint, condensing out moisture into fog.
Sea smoke, also known as steam fog, is produced when cool air passes over warmer water. This can often result in hoar frost or freezing fog.
fog
"Fog" generally is composed of tiny droplets of water condensed from moist air as it cools. In a car it refers to the water condensed onto the cold windows. Warming the air and glass re-evaporates the water.
Cold air holds less moisture than warm air. When you run the shower with hot water, the moisture condenses on the cold mirror surface causing it to fog up. If you run the shower cold, the mirror will not fog up.