Submitted by BustedLake t3_1215z0w in askscience
I have been a longtime basement tenant. Sometimes it seems like, during spring thaw periods, the air feels colder in the basement despite warmer temperatures above ground / outside. Is there any science at play re: frozen soil releasing cold temperatures at the ground / underground level? Or is it my imagination? Thank you for your time and consideration.
PyrrhoTheSkeptic t1_jdossrz wrote
You have it backwards, though the feeling is the same. Cold things absorb heat. Cold is the absence of heat, and is not a thing in itself.
So, in a basement, if the walls and soil outside are cold, they will absorb heat that comes into the air, making the air cooler down there.