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No, it will not any moisture. If you go down from high temperatures to low, then at so called dew point you will have some moisture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dew_point
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.
More, to make it snow, since the air is so cold, you would need a large body of hot air over the cold air to make the moisture turn into rain.
The mold requires moisture to grow so the more moisture the more mold.
It's all about the moisture in the air. the drier the air the faster something wet will dry out More moisture in the air = longer drying times.
No, it will not any moisture. If you go down from high temperatures to low, then at so called dew point you will have some moisture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dew_point
moisture
No.
Warm air can hold more moisture than cold air.
The air would contain more moisture over Panama than over Antarctica. This is because Antarctica is classified as a desert, and all of its moisture is frozen in snow or ice.
Over time brake fluid absorbs moisture. The more moisture in it the more likely it is to freeze if you are in cold weather, and the more the seals break down.
False because warm air rises. The particles in cold air are moving more slowly and make cold air more dense than warm air.
Biscuits go soft when they go stale because they contain less moisture than the atmospere, so they absorb it. Cakes, because they contain more moisture than the atmospere, go hard because they release moisture.
Warm air holds more moisture than cold air. In warm weather, there is increased evaporation of sea water.
Yes
In the cold weather is where you are going to run in to moisture build up. As you operate a vehicle it heats up, in cold weather you tend to get sweating, as it is called, on metal and plastic components. What does not evaporate is what leads to moisture up. If the tank is full of fuel, it is less likely to have any problems.
Warm air contains more moisture than cold air. The air hits the cold window and the moisture is deposited on the cold glass. It is the same effect that causes your glass full of a cold beverage to start to drip down the sides.