|
After what I can remember, the mixing of the two air parts (the cold and the hot) will give a new air temperature relative to the two parts of air's mass and initial temperature. The resulting air mixture (this is how i remember it) will allways be capable of holding the same ammount of water, which means, that some of the moisture will travel from the hot airmass to the cold airmass as an result of mixing them and evening out the temperature.
This is not the same as how clouds are born, as that includes pressure change.
-Ko_deZ-
|