It is called fog.
Condensation and saturation are more likely to occur on a cold day because cold air is typically less able to hold moisture than warm air. As air cools, its ability to hold water vapor decreases, leading to condensation and potential saturation of the air with moisture. Additionally, cooler air temperatures can bring air closer to its dew point, promoting the formation of droplets.
Humidity levels are typically higher at night because cooler air can hold less moisture than warm air. As the air cools at night, its ability to hold moisture decreases, which can result in higher relative humidity levels.
No. The keyword in this term is "relative." Relative humidity stands for the amount of moisture currently in the air with respect to (or relative to) the amount of moisture that can be held in the air. Colder air can hold less moisture than warm air, so there's a much greater chance of having 100% relative humidity when it's cool out than when it's warm out. For example, if you wake up on a cool morning and experience dew on the ground, it is because the cool air is holding as much moisture (i.e. humidity) as it possibly can. So you are experiencing 100% relative humidity. However, if that same amount of moisture stays in the air throughout the day, once the air warms up, the higher temperature allows for more moisture to be present in the air, and the air may not be fully saturated with moisture, thus you have a relative humidity that is less than 100%. So no, you do not have to be underwater to experience 100% relative humidity; in fact, underwater there is no air to surround you... so you're not experiencing any relative humidity at all.
A yellow sky in the morning can indicate that there is moisture in the air, which may mean that there is a possibility of rain later in the day.
Yes, wet clothes take longer to dry on a humid day because the air already has a high moisture content, so it cannot absorb as much additional moisture from the clothes. This slows down the process of evaporation, which is necessary for the clothes to dry.
A windy day is a good drying day because the movement of air helps to evaporate moisture from surfaces more quickly. The increased air circulation also helps to carry away the evaporated moisture, allowing items to dry faster. The wind can prevent the moisture from settling and lingering on surfaces, promoting quicker drying.
the air can have very little moisture
as there is much moisture outside.. and humid air does not soak moisture from clothes and let them dry..
because the sun evaporates moisture during the day, as the air cools at night it becomes denser.
This depends on various climatic conditions. In tropical climate if it is raining,moist then relative humidity very high. Day temperatures and corresponding dew point governs the % moisture in air. As a thumb rule you may confirm at say 30 deg.C day temperature moisture will be 4 to 5% by volume in air.
Condensation and saturation are more likely to occur on a cold day because cold air is typically less able to hold moisture than warm air. As air cools, its ability to hold water vapor decreases, leading to condensation and potential saturation of the air with moisture. Additionally, cooler air temperatures can bring air closer to its dew point, promoting the formation of droplets.
Humidity levels are typically higher at night because cooler air can hold less moisture than warm air. As the air cools at night, its ability to hold moisture decreases, which can result in higher relative humidity levels.
If a cool air mass comes in on a hot day, and if there is enough moisture, you can generally expect showers and thunderstorms.
Air-ground temperatures and humidity rise throughout the day, gaining their highest levels through late afternoon. This most likely produces convection Thunderstorms from the hot air rising from the ground and becoming more moist. Air saturated with moisture cannot hold that moisture.
On a damp day, the humidity in the air is higher, which means there is more moisture in the air already. This moisture makes it harder for water to evaporate quickly from the clothes on the line, so they will take longer to dry compared to a dry day with lower humidity.
Air has a certain amount of moisture in it at any given time. Warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cool air. On a summer day with moderate humidity, we don't notice the moisture in the air. At night, when the air cools down considerably, the cooler air can't hold all of the moisture, so some of it precipitates out of the air onto whatever surfaces the air surrounds. That's dew. If it becomes a very cold night, the dew freezes. That's frost.
When cold and warm air meet it makes moisture so the moisture is around the can since the inside is full of water.