none of the suspected but just because it is a multiple choice question the one that is nearly the answer is sinking if it was rising the would be life at mars people going to the space wouldn't need air tanks with them
Its "dryness" is irrelevant. What causes it to rise or sink is the relative density of the two bodies of air, temperature has the greatest affect on this.
why does the lava sink or rise?
HOT rises COLD sinks
No, dry is not an adverb.Adjective -- The dry air is bothering my allergies.Verb -- I dry my clothes after I wash them.
the answer is atmosphere and trosphere
Actually, cool air tends to be more dense and flow under warm air
cold air sinks as denser - warm air rises
rise
It tends to rise because it is warm air
the hot air will rise and the cool air will sink
The cool air will sink and the warm air will rise.
If an object has air in it than no it will not sink in water because air is less dense than water so it will rise in water.
They rise to the surface when air is pumped IN. They sink when air is let out
global wind patterns.
No air or any form of gas will always rise to the surface (as a bubble)
Cold is not a substance, so it can't sink. The air around the dry ice, and the gaseous carbon dioxide being formed will be cold and therefore dense, so they will sink through warmer air.
Nitrogen forms about 80% of the earth's atmosphere so I think it would neither sink nor rise
yes