yes
Their is recycled air in the carbon dioxide and oxygen cycle and no recycled air in the carbon cycle.
This describes what happens in a convection cycle.
The cycle that develops during air rising is called the convection cycle. It involves warm air rising, cooling and condensing to form clouds, followed by precipitation and then the sinking of cool air to complete the cycle.
An air-standard cycle is a theoretical cycle used to analyze the performance of internal combustion engines. It assumes ideal conditions where air is the working fluid and the combustion process is ideal without any heat losses. This simplification helps in understanding the basic thermodynamic principles governing engine operation.
The Convection Cycle
the Carnot cycle has 2 constant specific volume processes (heat in & heat out) the air refrigeration cycle is based on a brayton cycle which has two constant pressure processes.
The process you are describing is known as convection. This cycle occurs when a fluid, in this case, air, is heated, causing it to expand and rise due to lower density. As the air rises, it cools, becomes denser, and eventually sinks back down to be reheated, thus continuing the convection cycle.
Convection
In a cycle!=)
The movement of air is considered a cycle because it continuously circulates in the Earth's atmosphere through processes such as convection, wind patterns, and atmospheric circulation. Air masses are constantly being displaced and redistributed, creating a cycle of air movement around the globe.
The Bell-Coleman Cycle is also known as the Air-Standard Refrigeration Cycle or Reverse Brayton Cycle. This 4-process refrigeration cycle involves isentropic compression, followed by isobarric heat rejection, then isentropic expansion (usually by a turboexpander), and finally isobarric heat intake.This cycle is commonly used in jet aircraft, using engine bleed air for compression and venting to the atmosphere. It is also commonly used in commercial air liquification plants.
whay is it