well, you don't feel warm actually it s really cold outside
The evaporation of your perspiration is lessened when there is high humidity, making it more difficult for the body to cool itself off. It is not the act of sweating that cools you off, but the evaporation of the sweat.
NO! Definitely not.Humid means more water vapour, more water vapour, more heat loss as water vapour is still water and it can conduct heat away from the air and warm dRy air is just warm air basically. =3
On a hot humid day the air circulation is heldup by the moisture density present in the air. the air gains weight and will not move . where as on a dry hot day the air is lighter and travels freely. * * * * * The air on a hot humid day holds much more moisture than on a hot dry day. As a result, your perspiration will evaporate much more quickly on a dry hot day and the process of evaporation will require heat equivalent to the latent heat of vaporisation. A lot of this heat will be taken from your body and that is why you will feel cooler.
You can determine if the air is dry or humid by using a hygrometer, which measures the humidity level in the air. A low humidity level indicates dry air, while a high humidity level indicates humid air. Additionally, you can also observe physical signs such as dry skin and static electricity in dry air, and a sticky feeling and foggy windows in humid air.
Maritime polar and tropical, continental polar and tropical.
Its called humidity
Yes, humid air can feel colder than dry air because moisture in the air can conduct heat away from the body more effectively, making it feel cooler.
The country South Africa is more humid than it is dry.
Yes, humid air is heavier than dry air because water vapor molecules in humid air add to its overall weight.
Humid air has more water vapor mixed in it than dry air has.
Sweating cools you down more on a dry day than on a humid day.
It is humid.
No, Illinois is not a dry and humid land.
They are both dry and humid.
Yes, humid air tends to be heavier and denser than dry air, so it can often settle lower to the ground. This is why fog and mist, which consist of tiny water droplets, are commonly seen near the ground on humid days.
Because humid weather is more wet, but dry weather is dry, and static electricity does not stick to wet things.
Sweat glands. Your body perspires on hot days; the liquid water on your skin evaporates, carrying heat away from your body. That's why humid days feel so much hotter than dry days; the perspiration cannot evaporate when the humidity is high.