This depends on the gas.
Because liquid is heavier than vapours so gravity pull them back.
One example of a liquid heavier than syrup is mercury. Mercury is a dense liquid metal that is over 13 times heavier than water and significantly heavier than syrup due to its high density.
Heavier than What?
Mercury is a liquid that is less viscous but heavier than water. Mercury is a dense liquid metal at room temperature, making it heavier than water, which is less viscous than water due to its lower viscosity.
A liquid can be heavier than a solid due to differences in density and packing of molecules. In some cases, liquids have a higher density than solids of the same material, causing them to be heavier. Additionally, the ability of molecules in a liquid to move around freely and take up more space can contribute to its weight.
It must be heavier than the liquid you have introduced it to.
It would have to be heavier than the amount of liquid that it displaces.
No. Mercury is a liquid metal and is more dense.
No, cause' it's heavier than water or any other liquid
Water can't condense. Condensation is about something turning from a gas to a liquid. Once it has become a liquid it can't be come liquid-er.
Condensation
No, the weight of a liquid does not change based on whether it is pressurized or not. Pressurizing a liquid alters its density and compressibility, but not its weight.