More humidity means more energy input stored which ends up changing our climate.
Not exact matches
For the Weather Network, it
means hunting for counterintuitive ways that
humidity, pollen count, UV index and
more affect consumer behaviour.
«Dry winter air and heaters running
more means you'll need to add
humidity to the rooms you keep plants in, especially if you have tropicals, which many indoor plants are.»
Springtime (and rising temps) can
mean more humidity indoors, which is great news for dust mites and terrible news for your nose.
I love summer in general so if that
means slower paces, less miles, and
more humidity, well than I guess I'll take that over cold and snow..
High heat and
humidity means more fleas and summer is the best season for swimming which can cause ear infections that can lead to a hot spot.
They will base their recommendation on your regional weather conditions (high
humidity and heat
means more fleas on the way), your pet's health and level of flea infestation.
peak above that standard (supersaturation)-- after the peak, it declines, which
means that now as the droplets grow, the necessary relative
humidity to maintain them declines (which allows them to take
more water from the vapor phase).
Global climate change risks are high to very high with global
mean temperature increase of 4 °C or
more above preindustrial levels in all reasons for concern (Assessment Box SPM.1), and include severe and widespread impacts on unique and threatened systems, substantial species extinction, large risks to global and regional food security, and the combination of high temperature and
humidity compromising normal human activities, including growing food or working outdoors in some areas for parts of the year (high confidence).
For instance, on p187 «higher temperature
means more water vapor in the air and therefore fewer clouds» — Presumably, he
meant that if the temperature is higher, the relatively
humidity could be lower (and so there might be less clouds).
I'm told that a moist adiabat typically
means rain, which I don't think is correct, and that the shallower lapse rate resulting from
more humidity is * caused * by there being
more rain.
Concerning global warming: a warmer world is to be welcomed because it
means higher
humidity levels, a shrinkage of deserts,
more arable land, and a longer growing season all of which
mean more food production.
«Working with data pertaining to 7450 cardiovascular - related deaths that occurred within Budapest, Hungary, between 1995 and 2004 — where the deceased were «medico - legally autopsied» — Toro et al. looked for potential relationships between daily maximum, minimum and
mean temperature, air
humidity, air pressure, wind speed, global radiation and daily numbers of the heart - related deaths... scientists report and restate their primary finding numerous times throughout their paper, writing that (1) «both the maximum and the minimum daily temperatures tend to be lower when
more death cases occur in a day,» (2) «on the days with four or
more death cases, the daily maximum and minimum temperatures tend to be lower than on days without any cardiovascular death events,» (3) «the largest frequency of cardiovascular death cases was detected in cold and cooling weather conditions,» (4) «we found a significant negative relationship between temperature and cardiovascular mortality,» (5) «the analysis of 6 - hour change of air pressure suggests that
more acute or chronic vascular death cases occur during increasing air pressure conditions (implying cold weather fronts),» (6) «we found a high frequency of cardiovascular death in cold weather,» (7) «a significant negative relationship was detected between daily maximum [and] minimum temperature [s] and the number of sudden cardiovascular death cases,» and (8) «a significant negative correlation was detected between daily
mean temperature and cardiovascular mortality.»