The two will mix.
This is going to vary wildly, depending upon ambient temperature and load conditions.
Nitrogen is an efficient, cost-effective way to displace oxygen and moisture. Nitrogen reduces the oxygen content within food packaging and to avoid product deterioration. A secondary reason for using nitrogen is as a filler gas to provide a pressurized atmosphere that prevents package collapse, this is an important consideration for consumer brands.
Nitrogen i an unreactive gas. <><><><><> Nitrogen is not a noble gas so it is not non-reactive
why are you looking this up the answer it is yes because what is nitrogen going to do try to get air and then its is going to be all like sorry nitrogen I'm off limits!
80 mph for 1 hour will displace you 80 miles.
A loaded ship is going to sink into the water more,causing water to displace..
to the bottom
Its Nitrogen
Most obviously because there's no nitrogen in it; you're going to have a hard time making NITROphenol without nitrogen.
Water vapor. Heat flows from where it is hot to where it is not - that's basic thermodynamics. Thus, when you place ice in ambient air, the heat from the ambient air is going to transfer to that ice, and this sudden input of heat will cause the outer layer to undergo a rapid change of state.
What caliber? What bullet weight? How far away from the muzzle? What is the ambient temperature? How close to the equator? What continent? What angle is the bullet going to impact at?
NO! Because the coolant on a hot engine is VERY hot and under pressure, you risk SERIOUS injury if you open the cooling system on a hot engine. If you are going to be working on the cooling system, you should allow the engine to cool to ambient (or at least near ambient) temperature.