Yes. Humidity is the amount of water in the air. So if it's dry, it's not humid. If the air feels very heavy and moist, then it is humid. Warmer places have a tendency to be more humid than cooler places though, because when it's warm the molecules are more spread apart leaving room for water.
the word 'because' gives you the clue....it tells you the effect is made because...of an event!!
The desert is usually not humid unless it happens to be during the rainy season. I live in the desert and yesterday our humidity was 2% with a dewpoint of minus 26 degrees F. That is about as dry as one can find.
a desert is a dry landscape with no water in the air or in a basin. a humid tropical region has high levels of mouisture in the air and there is rivers and lakes nearby, also affecting the humidity. humidity comes from evaporated mouisture, which the desert has none of.
The desert has little humidity and rarely is cloudy. These two factors allow the desert to heat up rapidly during the day and cool off quickly at night. In other biomes humidity and clouds act as a blanket which slows down heating and cooling.
The Antarctic is classed as a desert. A desert doesn't have to be hot and full of sand-dunes. a definition from a dictionary is: any area in which few forms of life can exist because of lack of water, permanent frost, or absence of soil.
That is generally correct.
Continental tropical climates are hot and dry, characterized by high temperatures and low humidity. These regions typically experience very little precipitation and have wide daily temperature fluctuations.
Two of the driest places on earth are the Atacama Desert in Chile and the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica. These regions receive very little precipitation and have extremely low humidity levels, making them some of the driest places on the planet.
Dry arid climates can be found in regions such as the Sahara Desert in Africa, the Atacama Desert in South America, the Arabian Desert in the Middle East, and parts of Australia. These regions typically receive very little precipitation and experience high temperatures, with sparse vegetation.
A desert is a dry region that receives very little rain, typically less than 250 millimeters of rainfall per year. Other examples of dry regions include steppe and semi-arid regions.
A DESERT. e.g. Sahara Desert Gobi Desert Kalahari Desert Mojave Desert Atacama Desert.
Actually Antarctica is a desert, it's arid with only about five percent humidity. Plus it is exceptionally cold. By comparison, the Sahara desert in Africa is rated at from 25% to 30% humidity.
Actually, a desert has very high air pressure because dry air is so clear that the sun can easily heat through the ground, causing it to have very low humidity. That's why there is very little precipitation in desert's.
Desert region: characterized by hot temperatures and very low humidity levels. High-altitude areas: typically have lower humidity due to cooler temperatures and thinner air. Polar regions: cold temperatures and dry air result in low humidity levels.
well, climatic conditions are: dry, arid and low humidity areas
The Sahara Desert
The abiotic factor that describes the desert biome climate is low precipitation. Deserts receive very little rainfall, leading to dry and arid conditions with high temperatures and low humidity.