warm air hold more water vapor...unless it doesnt like sandwiches between its toes at 5 o'clock in the after noon
Short answer - no. Well, if you'd be able to overcome the cramps and the pain, it'd be possible for the lungs to move water in and out pretty much like they move air. Unfortunately our lungs can't extract (enough) oxygen to sustain life from water. We'd drown.
The ratio of the actual water vapor present in the air compared to the maximum amount it could hold at that temperature is known as relative humidity. It is expressed as a percentage and gives an indication of how close the air is to saturation. At 100% relative humidity, the air is holding the maximum amount of water vapor it can at that temperature.
85...The warmer the temperature, the more water vapor it can hold.
how much water vapor can a cubic meter of air hold at 25 centigrades grades?
The ratio of water vapor in a volume of air relative to how much water vapor that volume of air is capable of holding is called relative humidity. It is expressed as a percentage and provides insight into how close the air is to being saturated with water vapor.
If the relative humidity is 50 percent, the air is holding half of the maximum amount of water vapor it can hold at that temperature. This means the air is holding 50 percent of the water vapor it could potentially hold.
No. Warm air is capable of holding much more water vapour than cold air.
The air is holding as much water as it can. It will frequently be heavy fog or raining.
The temperature at which air is saturated and condensation forms is called the dew point. This is when the air is holding as much moisture as it can at that temperature, leading to water vapor in the air turning into liquid water droplets.
If the relative humidity is at 75%, the air is not holding it's maximuim amount of water vapor. If it was holding its maxumum amount it would be 100%. The formula for that is:Actual water vapor_______________ * 100 Equals the percentTotal water vapor
humidity
It is lower then for Warmer air
its water holding capacity
Dewpoint
35
Relative humidity expresses the amount of water vapor present in the air as a percentage of the maximum amount of water vapor the air can hold at that temperature. For example, if the relative humidity is 50%, it means the air is holding half of the maximum water vapor it can hold at that temperature.