Well, when i go outside in the fog I would think it was more of a warm feeling than cold, I know that fog is just clouds and when it gets very humid outside there is almost always fog. So I hope that answers your question.......
Advection fog forms when moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface, causing the air to cool and reach its dew point, leading to the condensation of water vapor into fog.
Yes, it will make water colder.
warm air and cold air gets together and make fog
winter
Fog typically occurs in calm, humid conditions when the air near the ground cools rapidly, causing water vapor to condense into tiny water droplets. It is often associated with cool and damp weather, typically forming at night or in the early morning. Fog can reduce visibility and make surfaces damp.
It is getting colder outside. It's colder in here than it is out there. My beer is colder.
Steam fog is fog that that comes off of water. It comes up when it is really ht outside.
Fog may form as much colder air moves over warmer ocean surface water. As the ocean evaporates into the colder air, it saturates the air producing fog that looks like streamers rising off the water.
Fog machines mimic what happens in nature. It needs sustained cool air and saturated moisture and a fan to blow the cloud outward. Because of temperature in the cloud and the room, the fog hugs the floor. To make it go away, they turn off the machine and let the room temp begin to warm the fog, decease the moisture, and make the fog "lighter". It rises. As it rises, it becomes warmer, until there is no evidence of fog or "cloud". If outside, the fog density rises into the sky where it just behaves like any other cloud.
A fog machine creates fog by heating a special fog fluid, which turns into vapor when it comes into contact with the cooler air outside the machine. This process creates a misty effect that resembles natural fog.
There was so much fog outside that it was hard for me to see, so I had to stay indoors.
It is colder
Advection fog forms when moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface, causing the air to cool and reach its dew point, leading to the condensation of water vapor into fog.
water+air=fog
The "haze" is like fog - made from the warm air from the room rushing into the colder freezer.
Fog is rare in London outside of TV programmes set in the 1800s
A sweating cup is colder than the air which surrounds it.