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I live in California, in Los Angeles during the winter it stays around between 40 and 50 degrees. But if you go inland more the temperature at night drops into the high and low 30's, and if we get unlucky it might drop below 30.

2007-01-29 16:12:45 · 7 answers · asked by Love LA 2 in Science & Mathematics Weather

7 answers

This is because water has a very high heat capacity, meaning that it maintains its temperature well. Thus, water takes a long time to heat up and a long time to cool off, wheras things like metal with lower heat capacities change temperature far faster.

The beach is warmer at night because the ocean releases heat gained through the day throughout the night, warming the general area. This is why coastal environments have tamer climates than inland ones (i.e. Washington vs. Montana). This is also why it's still pleasant to go swimming in the ocean in the middle of the night.

2007-01-29 16:23:52 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This is due to the difference in specific heats between land and sea.Land gets heated fast and also cools fast,where as water gets heated slowly and cools slowly.That is why when day temperatures are higher due to sun the land becomes hot and when the sun sets it becomes cold.The sea on the other hand gets heated only by evening and retains the heat for quite a lot of time in the night.This is also the cause for land breeze and sea breeze.

2007-01-29 22:05:44 · answer #2 · answered by jayaraman n--chemm 4 · 1 0

Water retains heat longer. I live near Lake Michigan, during the winter it is normally warmer by the lake as it takes several months for the lake temp to reach the air temp.

2007-01-30 05:44:17 · answer #3 · answered by USAFret 2 · 0 0

If your near the beach, the air temperature tends to be the same as the water temperature and drop dramatically away from the beach

2007-01-29 16:22:37 · answer #4 · answered by Justin 6 · 0 0

nicely, that is not particularly that straightforward. before everything, water has no organic tendency to upward push. whilst water gets warmth potential (from the solar, case in point), a number of it is going to evaporate right into a vapor. That vapor mixes with the air, inflicting humidity. If heat moist air is compelled to upward push, it expands and cools. The cool air is way less able to containing water vapor than heat air. At a definite factor, the water vapor interior the air starts to condense around airborne airborne dirt and dirt debris, forming clouds. If the spectacular form of clouds sort with sufficient moisture, the cloud drops can advance into heavy sufficient to fall to Earth as rain. So what motives heat moist air to upward push? in many circumstances, a mass of chilly air strikes into the area. chilly air, being extra dense than heat air, has a tendency to push the warmth air upward, wearing its moisture with it. heat moist air is additionally lifted by potential of driving up the fringe of a mountain ridge. you in many cases see clouds forming around the tops of mountains; this is as a results of the fact heat moist air is blowing up one fringe of the mountain, increasing, cooling, and inflicting the moisture to condense into cloud droplets. It does not continually rain on the coastline for the comparable reason it does not continually rain someplace else; the circumstances had to sort rain are not continually latest. in basic terms having a large physique of water interior sight does no longer propose which you will get consistent rain. i'm hoping that facilitates. stable success!

2016-12-16 16:44:48 · answer #5 · answered by allateef 4 · 0 0

I think sea breezes. Warms you in the winter and cools you in the summer.

2007-01-29 18:37:51 · answer #6 · answered by towanda 7 · 0 0

its not!

2007-01-29 19:17:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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