You will sweat the same on both days if your activity is the same. It will evaporate faster on a dry day, so you will notice less sweat on a dry day.
Humid day
You typically sweat more on a hot humid day because the high humidity reduces the rate at which sweat evaporates from your skin, making it feel like you are sweating more. On the other hand, on a hot dry day, sweat evaporates more easily, which can help cool your body more efficiently.
People actually sweat the same amount on a humid day as they do a cold, dry day. The difference is that the sweat isn't able to evaporate as quickly because of how much moisture is already in the air.
Sweating cools you down more on a dry day than on a humid day.
No, since sauna is very humid and it makes your body sweat more.
We seem to 'sweat more' on a humid day because as the air is already packed with water molecules, our sweat does not get a chance to evaporate as fast as it would in dry air. So as there is 'no room' for sweat to be absorbed into the water-filled air, which is what humidity is, the sweat just remains a liquid and drips down instead....
It is actually not a matter of sweating more but of it being more difficult to evaporate the sweat. If you are in a dry and windy place it is very simple for sweat to evaporate, in a more humid area there is more water in the air already and therefore makes evaporation of the sweat much more difficult. Then it would appear that you sweat more because you are seeing the sweat, however it is a matter of evaporation.
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.
Because humid weather is more wet, but dry weather is dry, and static electricity does not stick to wet things.
A ball is more likely to travel further on a dry day, as the air is less dense compared to a humid day. The higher density of humid air can create more air resistance, resulting in a shorter distance traveled by the ball.
Humid air contains more water molecules that can dissipate excess charge away from the object being charged, reducing its ability to accumulate charge. This makes it more difficult to charge an object by friction on a humid day compared to a dry day.
A wet bulb will cool down more on a dry day because the dry air has a greater capacity to absorb moisture, resulting in more evaporation from the wet bulb and therefore a greater cooling effect compared to a humid day where the air is already saturated with moisture.