IAS Prelims Geography Q.14 – 2024 | Atmosphere: Water Vapour
Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk
📍 The Question
With reference to water vapour, which of the following statements is/are correct?
- It is a gas, the amount of which decreases with altitude.
- Its percentage is maximum at the poles.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Correct Answer: (a) 1 only
🎯 Theme of the Question
Physical Geography | Atmosphere | Variable Gases | Climatology
This question tests understanding of distribution and behaviour of water vapour in the atmosphere.
🧠 Classroom Explanation
Water vapour is a variable gas in the atmosphere, meaning its quantity varies with place, time, and altitude.
Let us examine the statements one by one.
🔹 Statement 1: Water vapour is a gas whose amount decreases with altitude. ✅
- Water vapour is concentrated in the lower layers of the atmosphere
- As altitude increases:
- Temperature decreases
- Air becomes thinner
- Capacity to hold moisture reduces
- Hence, water vapour content decreases rapidly with height
✔️ Statement 1 is correct
🔹 Statement 2: Its percentage is maximum at the poles. ❌
- Water vapour content depends on:
- Temperature
- Evaporation
- Warm regions can hold more moisture
- In the tropics, water vapour may reach up to 4% by volume
- In polar and cold regions, it is often less than 1%
Thus, water vapour is minimum at the poles, not maximum.
✘ Statement 2 is incorrect
📊 Final Assessment
| Statement | Status |
|---|---|
| Decreases with altitude | ✅ Correct |
| Maximum at the poles | ❌ Incorrect |
👉 Only Statement 1 is correct
❌ UPSC Elimination Logic
- UPSC checks:
- Whether aspirants confuse temperature zones
- Cold air holds less moisture, not more
- Poles are dry, not humid
🧩 Memory Hook
“Warm air holds water; cold air lets it go.”
🧠 Prelims Strategy Insight
For atmospheric gases:
- Nitrogen & Oxygen → constant gases
- Water vapour & CO₂ → variable gases
- Always link temperature with moisture capacity
🧭 IAS Monk Whisper
Moisture follows warmth — not latitude alone.
