warm air can hold much water vapour give reason
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warm air has large intermolecular spaces between them the water molecules could easily fit in the gaps while not cold air that are condense enough with less intermolecular space
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here dude
Explanation:
When air holds as much water vapour as it can for a given temperature (100% relative humidity), it is said to be saturated. If saturated air is warmed, it can hold more water (relative humidity drops), which is why warm air is used to dry objects--it absorbs moisture. ... Such air compresses and warms.
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