Yes
No. Fluids move away from areas of high pressure and toward areas of low pressure.
from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure
Adding heat to water vapor will just cause the molecules to gain energy and move faster. As long as the amount of energy added is not extraordinary, this is all that will happen. At extremely high temperatures, the water vapor may convert to hydrogen and oxygen gas.
The movement of molecules from an area of high concentration of that molecule to an area of lower concentration is called simple diffusion.
SouthEast
Heat will will move from an object of higher temperature to an object of lower temperature
The higher the temperatures, the faster the atoms move. If the temperatures are high enough, the atoms may move apart changing the state of the object.
Heat (thermal energy) will generally move from areas with more heat towards areas with less heat.
Particles move at a faster rate at higher temperatures, than they do at lower temperatures. This is do to the fact that heat is a form of energy. When a particle has more energy is moves faster.
No. Fluids move away from areas of high pressure and toward areas of low pressure.
No, it does not.
No, it does not.
molecules (or atoms) move faster at higher temperatures. higher temperature is a measure of higher kinetic energy.
when you touch something hot , a message flashes to and from your spinal cord.this reflex causes you to move your hand.
Nope... wind always flows from high-pressure areas to low.
Yes, it does move from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. If it didn't we would have no such thing as wind.
from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure