Chapter 5: Humidity

DGCA CPL/ATPL Study Notes — Aviation Meteorology
Compiled by Capt. Pankaj Pahil
Source: IC Joshi — Aviation Meteorology (Latest Edition)
CPL / ATPL Examination Preparation

Table of Contents

1. Introduction — Water Vapour & The Water Cycle

📘 Core Concept Water vapour is always present in the air to a greater or lesser extent, in the troposphere. This water vapour plays a very important role in all the atmospheric processes.

Water evaporates into the air from oceans, lakes, rivers, and vegetation. It ascends and forms clouds which cause precipitation. This is the water cycle.

flowchart LR
    A[Oceans / Lakes\nRivers / Vegetation] -->|Evaporation| B[Water Vapour\nin Atmosphere]
    B -->|Ascending air\nCooling| C[Cloud Formation\nCondensation]
    C -->|Precipitation| D[Rain / Snow / Hail]
    D -->|Runoff| A
    style A fill:#e3f2fd,stroke:#1565c0
    style B fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32
    style C fill:#f3e5f5,stroke:#6a1b9a
    style D fill:#fff3e0,stroke:#e65100
⚡ Key Principle The capacity of dry air to hold water vapour depends largely on temperature (higher temperature = higher capacity) and to some extent on pressure. Higher the temperature, higher the capacity of air to hold water vapour.

2. Three Phases of Water

PhaseStateExamples
Gas Water Vapour Invisible moisture in the atmosphere
Liquid Water Rain, drizzle, shower, super-cooled water droplets
Solid Ice Snow, hail, ice crystals, hoar frost

3. Key Humidity Terms & Definitions

📘 Dry Air Air that contains no water vapour is called dry air. Such an air may exist in the upper troposphere or stratosphere.
📘 Moist Air The normal air that we breathe is the moist air. It is also called unsaturated or dry air at the existing temperature and pressure.
📘 Saturated Air Air is like a sponge which can absorb certain amount of water and no more. When the air holds maximum water vapour, it is called saturated air.
📘 Vapour Pressure (VP) The partial pressure exerted by the water vapour in the air is called vapour pressure. If p is the total pressure of air and e is the vapour pressure, then (p − e) is the pressure of dry air.
📘 Saturation Vapour Pressure (SVP) It is the pressure exerted by water vapour when air is saturated.
📘 Absolute Humidity It is defined as the actual amount of water vapour contained in a given volume of air at a given temperature. It is expressed in g/m³.
📘 Humidity Mixing Ratio (HMR) It is defined as the mass of water vapour contained in a given mass of air. It is expressed as g/kg.
📘 HMR for Saturated Air The maximum mass of water vapour that can be contained in a given mass of dry air at a particular temperature and pressure. Also expressed as g/kg of dry air. The saturation humidity mixing ratio increases with temperature.
TermDefinitionUnitKey Note
Absolute HumidityWater vapour per unit VOLUMEg/m³Changes with T and P
HMRWater vapour per unit MASS of airg/kgConstant if no moisture added/removed
Vapour Pressure (VP)Partial pressure of water vapourhPae in gas equations
SVPVP when air is saturatedhPaIncreases with temperature
⚠️ Critical — HMR During Adiabatic Lifting If there is no addition or removal of water vapour, the HMR remains constant when air is lifted adiabatically. The mixing ratio is a conservative property during adiabatic processes.

4. Relative Humidity (RH)

📘 Definition Relative Humidity is defined as the ratio, in percentage, of the actual water vapour in the air to the maximum it can contain at the same temperature and pressure.
RH (%) = (HMR × 100) / (HMR for Saturated Air)
OR equivalently:
RH (%) = (VP of Air × 100) / (SVP of Air)
HMRHumidity Mixing Ratio of actual air
HMR(sat)HMR for saturated air at same temperature
VPActual Vapour Pressure
SVPSaturation Vapour Pressure at same temperature
⚡ RH Measurement Humidity is measured by the instruments Psychrometer and Hygrometer, and is recorded by Hygrograph.
⚠️ RH vs Dew Point — Key Distinction
flowchart TD
    A[Air Sample] --> B{Change made?}
    B -->|Temperature changes\nwater content same| C[RH changes\nDP unchanged]
    B -->|Water content changes\ntemperature same| D[Both RH and DP change]
    B -->|Air lifted adiabatically\nno water added/removed| E[HMR unchanged\nRH increases as T drops]
    style C fill:#fff8e1,stroke:#f57c00
    style D fill:#fdecea,stroke:#c0392b
    style E fill:#e8f1fb,stroke:#2c5aa0

5. Temperature Parameters — Wet Bulb, Dew Point & Frost Point

📘 Wet Bulb Temperature (Tw) It is the lowest temperature which air would attain by evaporating water into it to saturate it. Desert coolers work on this principle. The drier the air, the more effective would be the cooling.
📘 Dew Point Temperature (TdTd or Td) It is the lowest temperature to which air should be cooled at constant pressure to saturate it with respect to water. Cooling below Dew Point (DP) causes condensation.
📘 Frost Point It is the temperature to which air must be cooled to reach saturation with respect to ice. Cooling below the frost point causes formation of hoar frost.
Temperature Hierarchy in Unsaturated Air COLD WARM Frost Point Saturation wrt ICE Below → Hoar Frost Dew Point (Td) Saturation wrt WATER Below → Condensation Wet Bulb (Tw) Evaporative cooling Desert cooler principle Air Temp (TT) Actual temp Dry bulb reading Unsaturated Air: Frost Pt < Td < Tw < TT Saturated Air (Fog/Rain): TT = Tw = Td
TemperatureSymbolDefinitionBelow This →
Air Temperature TT Actual ambient air temperature (dry bulb) N/A
Wet Bulb Temp Tw Lowest T by evaporating water to saturate the air Not applicable (evaporative limit)
Dew Point TdTd / Td T at which air saturates with respect to water at constant pressure Condensation (dew, fog)
Frost Point T at which air saturates with respect to ice Hoar frost formation
🧠 Key Relationship — Unsaturated Air
TT > Tw > Td (Unsaturated Air)
TT = Tw = Td (Saturated Air — Fog, During Rain)
When RH = 100%, all three temperatures converge.

6. Cloud Base Calculation

📘 Empirical Cloud Base Formula The theoretical height of the base of cloud can be determined using surface temperatures by the empirical formula:
Cloud Base Height = (TT − Td) × 400 ft
TTSurface Air Temperature (°C)
TdSurface Dew Point Temperature (°C)
(TT − Td)Dew Point Spread or Depression
400 ftEmpirical constant per °C spread

🔢 Worked Example — Cloud Base

Given: Surface temperature TT = 25°C, Dew Point Td = 15°C

DP Spread: 25 − 15 = 10°C

Cloud Base = 10 × 400 = 4,000 ft AGL

Note: Smaller the spread between TT and Td, lower the cloud base. When spread = 0, cloud is at surface (fog).

⚠️ Important When TT = Td (spread = zero), the cloud base is at the surface — this is fog (or very low stratus). The smaller the dew point depression, the closer the air is to saturation.
🧠 Memory Aid "4-0-0 feet per degree of spread" — if the spread is 5°C, cloud base = 2000 ft. If 10°C, cloud base = 4000 ft. The cooler and moister the air, the lower the cloud base.

7. SVP over Water vs Ice — Sub-Zero Behaviour

📘 Important Sub-Zero Principle At sub-zero temperatures, water molecules have more energy and a greater degree of freedom than ice. Consequently, the saturation vapour pressure over water is more than that over ice particles.
⚠️ Bergeron-Findeisen Process — Exam Important If water drops and ice particles co-exist in a cloud:
flowchart TD
    A["Mixed-phase Cloud\n(Water drops + Ice crystals\nat same sub-zero temperature)"] --> B{"SVP over Water\nvs SVP over Ice"}
    B -->|"SVP(water) > SVP(ice)"| C[Water drops evaporate]
    C --> D[Water vapour condenses\non ice crystals]
    D --> E[Ice crystals grow\nwater drops shrink]
    E --> F[Ice crystals become heavy\nand fall as precipitation]
    F --> G["Melts below 0°C level\n→ RAIN at surface"]
    style A fill:#e3f2fd,stroke:#1565c0
    style B fill:#fff8e1,stroke:#f57c00
    style G fill:#e8f5e9,stroke:#2e7d32
⚠️ Super-Cooled Water Droplets — Critical for Aviation Icing Small water droplets can exist in a super-cooled (liquid below 0°C) state:

8. Temperature Relationships — Saturated vs Unsaturated Air

✅ Saturated Air (Fog, During Rain)
Air Temperature (TT) = Wet Bulb (Tw) = Dew Point (Td)
When RH = 100%, the air is saturated and all three temperature readings are identical.
⚡ Unsaturated Air
TT > Tw > Td
In normal (unsaturated) air, air temperature is highest, wet bulb is intermediate, and dew point is lowest.
ConditionTT vs Tw vs TdRHDP Spread
Saturated air (fog, heavy rain) TT = Tw = Td 100% 0°C
Unsaturated air (normal) TT > Tw > Td < 100% > 0°C
Very dry air (desert) TT >> Tw > Td Very low Large spread

9. Quick Revision Summary

⚡ Chapter 5 — Quick Revision: Humidity

10. Practice Q&A — DGCA Examination Style

📘 Answer Key Q1=b, Q2=c, Q3=b, Q4=b, Q5=b, Q6=a, Q7=b, Q8=a, Q9=c, Q10=a
Q1. The ratio in % between the amount of water vapour present in the air to the amount of water vapour that it can hold at the same temperature is:
(a) Humidity    (b) Relative humidity    (c) Dew point
✅ Correct Answer: (b) Relative Humidity
Explanation: Relative Humidity is precisely defined as the ratio (in %) of the actual water vapour content to the maximum water vapour the air can hold at the same temperature and pressure. It is "relative" because it compares actual moisture to maximum possible moisture.
❌ Distractors: (a) Humidity — too vague; humidity is the general term for water vapour content. (c) Dew Point — a temperature, not a ratio.
📌 Instructor's Note: RH = (VP/SVP) × 100 = (HMR/HMR-sat) × 100. When RH = 100%, air is saturated. RH depends on BOTH water content AND temperature.
Q2. The temperature to which air be cooled at constant pressure to become saturated is called:
(a) Wet bulb temperature    (b) Dry bulb temperature    (c) Dew point    (d) Humidity
✅ Correct Answer: (c) Dew Point
Explanation: The Dew Point Temperature is defined as the lowest temperature to which air must be cooled at constant pressure to become saturated with respect to water. Below this temperature, condensation occurs.
❌ Distractors: (a) Wet Bulb — this is the temperature attained by evaporating water INTO the air, not by cooling it. The process is different. (b) Dry bulb — this is just the ordinary air temperature. (d) Humidity — a measure of moisture content, not a temperature.
📌 Instructor's Note: Key distinction — Dew Point is achieved by COOLING at constant pressure. Wet Bulb is achieved by EVAPORATION into the air. Both result in saturation but by different processes.
Q3. Free air temperature, Wet bulb temperature and Dew point temperature are equal when:
(a) Air temperature is 0°C
(b) Relative humidity is 100%
(c) Air temperature is not below 0°C
✅ Correct Answer: (b) Relative humidity is 100%
Explanation: When RH = 100%, the air is fully saturated. There is no difference between actual moisture content and maximum possible moisture content, so TT = Tw = Td. This condition exists in fog, during heavy rain, or in saturated cloud.
❌ Distractors: (a) 0°C is not a condition for equality — it could be 0°C with any RH. (c) Temperature above 0°C has no special significance for this relationship.
📌 Instructor's Note: "Fog = TT = Tw = Td" — when you see fog or are in cloud, assume these three temperatures are equal. This is frequently tested. RH = 100% is the ONLY condition that makes all three equal.
Q4. On a rainy day compared to sunny day the length of runway required is:
(a) More    (b) Less    (c) Same
✅ Correct Answer: (b) Less
Explanation: On a rainy day, the air temperature is typically cooler than on a sunny day, and the air is closer to saturation. Cooler, denser air means better aerodynamic performance — more lift, better engine efficiency — so a shorter runway is needed. Additionally, cooler and moister conditions reduce density altitude.
❌ Distractors: (a) More — on a rainy day, if water contamination on the runway is ignored and we focus purely on atmospheric density, performance is better. (Runway contamination is a separate consideration not addressed here.) (c) Same — temperature and density differences always affect performance.
📌 Instructor's Note: This question is about atmospheric effects on performance. Rainy day = cooler + denser air = better aircraft performance = less runway needed. Separate question from wet/contaminated runway effects.
Q5. The spread (difference) between Free air temperature and Dew point temperature is ………… when air is saturated:
(a) Large    (b) Least    (c) Same
✅ Correct Answer: (b) Least (approaches zero)
Explanation: When air is saturated (RH = 100%), TT = Td. The spread between them is zero — the minimum possible. The spread (TT − Td) is also called the "dew point depression." Zero spread means the air is at saturation.
❌ Distractors: (a) Large — the spread is largest in very dry air (desert conditions). (c) Same — the spread changes constantly with temperature and moisture content.
📌 Instructor's Note: DP Spread / DP Depression = TT − Td. Spread = 0 → fog/saturation. Spread large → dry air, high cloud bases. Cloud Base = Spread × 400 ft.
Q6. The saturation vapour pressure over water is ………… than the ice:
(a) More    (b) Less    (c) Same
✅ Correct Answer: (a) More
Explanation: At sub-zero temperatures, water molecules in the liquid state have more kinetic energy (greater degree of freedom) than in the solid (ice) state. Therefore, the saturation vapour pressure over liquid water exceeds that over ice at the same temperature. This SVP difference drives the Bergeron-Findeisen process of precipitation formation.
❌ Distractors: (b) Less — incorrect; the higher molecular energy of liquid water means higher SVP. (c) Same — there is always a difference at sub-zero temperatures; SVP over water and ice are only equal at exactly 0°C.
📌 Instructor's Note: SVP(water) > SVP(ice) at sub-zero → ice grows, water drops shrink → Bergeron process → rainfall. This is why clouds with both water drops AND ice crystals produce efficient precipitation.
Q7. As the temperature of the air increases, the amount of water vapour required to saturate it:
(a) decreases    (b) increases    (c) remains same
✅ Correct Answer: (b) increases
Explanation: Warmer air has a greater capacity to hold water vapour. The saturation humidity mixing ratio (HMR-sat) and the saturation vapour pressure (SVP) both increase with temperature. This is why warm tropical air can hold much more moisture than cold polar air.
❌ Distractors: (a) decreases — opposite is true. (c) remains same — capacity changes significantly with temperature.
📌 Instructor's Note: "Warm air = bigger sponge." The SVP curve rises steeply with temperature. This is why tropical air is so humid — warm air can hold more moisture before becoming saturated.
Q8. The actual amount of water vapour contained in a given volume of air at a given temperature is termed as:
(a) Relative Humidity    (b) Specific Humidity    (c) Absolute Humidity
✅ Correct Answer per textbook: (a) Relative Humidity
Explanation: The textbook answer is (a). However, note that by standard meteorological definition, the "actual amount of water vapour in a given volume" is Absolute Humidity (g/m³). Relative Humidity is a ratio (%). This question may contain an error in the textbook — the physically correct answer is Absolute Humidity. Accept (a) for examination purposes as it is the textbook answer.
⚠️ Note on this Question: There is a likely error here. Absolute Humidity = water vapour per unit volume (g/m³). Specific Humidity = water vapour per unit mass of moist air (g/kg). Relative Humidity = ratio of actual to saturation vapour pressure (%). For DGCA exam, use textbook answer (a).
📌 Instructor's Note: Study all three definitions carefully: Absolute Humidity (per volume, g/m³), HMR/Specific Humidity (per mass, g/kg), Relative Humidity (ratio, %). This question has a textbook discrepancy — learn the correct meteorological definitions independently.
Q9. Humidity Mixing Ratio ………… when air is lifted adiabatically:
(a) Relative Humidity    (b) remains constant    (c) increases
✅ Correct Answer per textbook: (c) increases
Explanation per textbook: The textbook answer is (c). However, the standard meteorological principle states that HMR remains constant during adiabatic lifting (no water added or removed). What INCREASES during adiabatic ascent is Relative Humidity (as temperature drops, SVP decreases, so RH = VP/SVP rises toward 100%).

It is possible the question intended to ask about Relative Humidity, not HMR. Option (a) reads "Relative Humidity" which may be part of the intended answer ("Relative Humidity increases when air is lifted adiabatically"). Accept textbook answer (c) for exam purposes.
⚠️ Important Distinction: HMR = constant during adiabatic ascent (no moisture added/removed). RH = INCREASES during adiabatic ascent (temperature falls, SVP drops, so the same amount of water represents a higher % of saturation). Learn both correctly.
📌 Instructor's Note: During adiabatic lifting: HMR = constant BUT RH increases (reaches 100% at the LCL = Lifting Condensation Level = cloud base). Above the LCL, condensation begins and the now-saturated parcel follows a different (saturated adiabatic) lapse rate.
Q10. It is the lowest temperature which air would attain by evaporating water into it to saturate it:
(a) Wet bulb temp    (b) Dry bulb temp    (c) Dew point
✅ Correct Answer: (a) Wet Bulb Temperature
Explanation: Wet Bulb Temperature (Tw) is precisely defined as the lowest temperature which air would attain by evaporating water into it until it is saturated. The evaporative cooling process lowers the temperature to the wet bulb value. Desert coolers work on this same principle — drier the air, more the cooling effect.
❌ Distractors: (b) Dry bulb — this is simply the ordinary air temperature measured by an unmodified thermometer. (c) Dew point — cooling the air without adding moisture until it saturates; different process (temperature-lowering vs. moisture-adding).
📌 Instructor's Note: Two routes to saturation: (1) ADD MOISTURE → reach Wet Bulb temperature. (2) REMOVE HEAT (cool) → reach Dew Point. Both achieve saturation but by opposite processes. Wet bulb > Dew point in unsaturated air.

11. Master Reference Tables

11.1 All Numerical Values — Chapter 5

ParameterValueContext
Absolute Humidity unitg/m³Water vapour per unit volume
HMR unitg/kgWater vapour per unit mass of air
Cloud base constant400 ft/°CCloud Base = (TT − Td) × 400 ft
Super-cooled droplets (normal clouds)up to −40°CIcing hazard
Super-cooled droplets (CB clouds)up to −45°CSevere icing in CB
RH at saturation100%TT = Tw = Td condition
Dew point spread at saturation0°CFog / in-cloud condition

11.2 Formula Sheet

FormulaVariablesApplication
RH (%) = (HMR/HMR-sat) × 100 HMR = actual mixing ratio; HMR-sat = saturation mixing ratio Relative Humidity calculation
RH (%) = (VP/SVP) × 100 VP = actual vapour pressure; SVP = saturation vapour pressure Alternative RH formula
Cloud Base = (TT − Td) × 400 ft TT = air temp, Td = dew point (°C) Estimating cloud base height AGL
Dry air pressure = p − e p = total pressure; e = vapour pressure Pressure partitioning

11.3 Key Distinctions — Humidity Terms

What Changes?Effect on RHEffect on DPEffect on HMR
Temperature increases onlyRH decreasesNo changeNo change
Temperature decreases onlyRH increasesNo changeNo change
Water content increasesRH increasesDP increasesHMR increases
Air lifted adiabaticallyRH increasesNo changeNo change (constant)

11.4 Answer Key

Q1b
Q2c
Q3b
Q4b
Q5b
Q6a
Q7b
Q8a*
Q9c*
Q10a

* Q8 and Q9 may contain textbook discrepancies — see detailed explanations above. Learn the standard meteorological definitions independently.

11.5 Mnemonics Quick Reference

🧠 All Mnemonics — Chapter 5
Capt. Pankaj Pahil