Answer:
Weather
Step-by-step explanation:
Given the temperature, humidity, and wind speed with great accuracy, evaporation rises due to wind in a predictable and understandable manner.
Evaporation increases the amount of that material in the air around it until there is a balance between the material evaporating from the material and the molecules condensing back from the air. Lets consider water but anything that evaporates will do: alcohol, petrol etc. Moving air transports the air that was immediately around the surface of water or wet object, the source of the evaporation and replaces it with air from further afar. That original air has a higher humidity than the general air, so the new air brought in has a lower humidity. Lower local humidity makes the evaporation faster; evaporation rises until the balance is established again. However, that new air is replaced by newer air and so on, maintaining the high evaporation rate.
There is a lesser effect too from the lowering of air pressure immediately behind an object in a wind, and a lower pressure makes evaporation need less energy and so increases the rate even more. But this is much less than the effect of removing the saturated air, mentioned above.
Thank you,
Eddie