none of your beeswax
Clear night.
On a calm, clear night
No, dew is thick, most of the time. Examples of condensation include; Heat on a cold window, or mist.
The temperature to which air must be cooled to reach saturation is called the dew point.
rain falls while dew drizzles.
OK so what you do is you get mountain dew and raisins.....then you put the mountain dew in a graduated cylinder. you don't tell anyone that its mountain dew and raisin's you say the raisins are maggots then you let the "maggots" sit in the mountain dew for a while and then drink some of it. ask the kids why they think the maggots float up and down. then tell them that its mountain dew and raisins.
All dressed up in our Sunday best, the dew on the grass made our shoes all wet.
Not too much forms on the sun
Well dew is a form of condensation. That being said a dry climate is less likely to produce dew.
Well dew is a form of condensation. That being said a dry climate is less likely to produce dew.
Well dew is a form of condensation. That being said a dry climate is less likely to produce dew.
When air high above the earth' surface is cooled below the dew point it is likely to form?
When air high above the earth' surface is cooled below the dew point it is likely to form?
Dew can form in any season but it generally most common in the fall.
Mt. Dew!
Clouds.
Dew is the tiny drops of water that form on cool surfaces at night, when atmospheric water vapor condenses: "The grass was wet with morning dew" "The windshield of the parked car was covered in dew- it had been there for some time."
When air high above the Earth's surface is cooled below the dew point, it is likely to form clouds. Clouds are visible mass of liquid droplets or frozen crystals made of water.
Dew does not form damp and wet conditions.