WHAT IS THE WEATHER?
By the weather we mean the temperature, the amount of moisture in the air, the pressure of the air, the movement of the air, and all the conditions that have to do with the atmosphere, such as heat, cold, rain, snow, sleet, fog, frost, dew, etc. It has to do with everything, from calmness and clearness to cloudiness and blizzards.
THE EFFECT OF THE SUN
The sun has a great deal to do with the regulation of the weather. Its heat causes evaporation; it is the rays of the sun that raises the vapor from the water and brings it into the air; it is the cooling of this vapor that produces the rain, hail and sleet storms, and its brilliancy causes a difference in air pressure at times. It is this difference in air pressure that produces winds, as you will learn later.
HUMIDITY
The state of the air with respect to the vapor that it contains is called its humidity. The humidity is said to be high when the air is damp, and low when the air is dry. Humidity and moisture in the air are important factors about the weather. It is lack of humidity that has more to do with poor health, colds, and catarrh than anything else. The importance of proper humidity in houses and buildings cannot be emphasized too greatly. Proper humidity will save twelve and one-half per cent in the cost of heating. The great majority of people are under the impression that colds are caused by sudden change in temperature, but the most colds are actually caused by stuffy, hot rooms. The reason that some people complain that 70° is not hot enough is because the humidity is too low, but if the moisture is brought into the air at a proper degree, the humidity is maintained. You will find that 68° will be a proper temperature to maintain in a room. The reason for this is that the air in the room is dry and the heat actually goes through it. In other words, it does not warm it; moist air stops radiation. Consequently, the result is that it warms it. In other words, moisture is nothing more than clothing, and this accounts for the fact that in a hot room, where there is no moisture, we heat our rooms beyond the degree that is necessary in order to feel any reasonable amount of comfort. Dry air allows too much radiation from the body and too rapid evaporation, which makes us cold.
The following experiment illustrates the above statement. Place a few drops of water on a smooth surface, such as a table top or ordinary board, and over this a watch glass, containing a small quantity of ether. In order to hasten evaporation, blow a current of air across it, and it will be found that the glass will be frozen to the board. This is caused by the evaporation of the ether, which uses up heat.
You know a great many times when you go out into the wind how cold it feels, and yet if the wind would actually stop, you would think it warm. It is the wind that causes the rapid evaporation and makes the surface of the skin feel cold. As it is true that the moisture in the air acts as a blanket to us in our homes, it is likewise as true that the vapor in its natural form outside of the house acts as a blanket for the earth. Do you realize that without this blanket we would burn up in the summer and freeze to death in the winter?
FOGS
Water vapor in the air is transparent, but when this water vapor becomes cooled, a portion of it becomes precipitated, which is no more or less than drops of water that are extremely small, but yet large enough to become transparent, and the atmosphere in this state is called fog. In reality, fogs are nothing more than clouds near the surface of the earth. When the ground is at a higher temperature than the air, it produces fogs. They are also produced when a current of moist air and a current of hot air pass over a body of water at a lower temperature. Consequently, you can easily see that fog will never form when it is dry.