No. Gasses are normally highly compressible. Liquids such as water and melted metals, have low compressibility.
No,an increase in pressure in liquid does not increase it compressibility but it does in gas:-P
gas
Compressibility is the ability of something to be "squashed" into a smaller space. Gases are very compressible with relatively little pressure. Liquids are much less compressible and solids even less so. (Try to squeeze your desk into a smaller space...)
compressibility
Compressibility. A lot of gas is forced into the cylinders.
Low density, no shape, high compressibility
high compressibility of gas is very useful to us. due to this property, gases can be easily liquified into very small volumes and can be used in our homes and in other works. eg. LPG, CNG.
The compressibility of water is very low.
Many people know about the many states that all matter on earth can take. From solid to liquid and from gas to plasma, all of them have different properties which are what distinguishes one from the other. The gas state, for example is a state in which the matter has indefinite shape and volume, it also has a very low density and a high compressibility.
the compressibility of gas
gas
No,an increase in pressure in liquid does not increase it compressibility but it does in gas:-P
At this condition the compressibility factor will approximately be 1.03936 This shows that the air will behave al most as an ideal gas at very high pressure
1.074
The compressibility of gases is utilized.
For an Ideal gas(steam), the compressibility factor is obviously unity under all conditions whereas for real gas(steam), the compressibility factor may be less or more than unity based on the actual conditions. With best regards, elavazhgan.
compressibility