by definition a vacuum is empty. as in nothing. there is nothing in a vacuum. so the answer is, by current knowledge, that nothing happens in a vacuum
Examples of vacuums include the vacuum inside a sealed jar, the vacuum of outer space, and the vacuum inside a vacuum cleaner.
It goes to the ac/heater control head.
No, a vacuum by definition is a space with no air molecules present. Therefore, there are no air molecules inside a vacuum.
A vacuum is an empty space with nothing inside it.
I used a knee high stocking inside the polaris bag. It was easy and it works!
By expanding them, you create a vacuum inside them; given a portal (your mouth, nose), the vacuum will pull the ambient air in, just as a vacuum cleaner pulls things inside by creating a vacuum.
When an egg is placed on the opening of a bottle and the air inside the bottle is heated (for example, by lighting a small piece of paper inside), the air expands and some escapes. Once the flame goes out, the air inside cools, creating a vacuum. The higher atmospheric pressure outside the bottle then pushes the egg into the bottle as it attempts to equalize the pressure difference.
The suction of a vacuum is caused by a difference in air pressure inside the vacuum cleaner compared to outside. A motor creates a low-pressure zone inside the vacuum, causing the higher-pressure air outside to push debris into the vacuum cleaner.
"VAcuum advance". Step on it, vacuum goes down and it advances timing for more performance/power. Idle of letting off, advance goes back to setting for economy.
The vacuum reduces both conduction and convection.
Pressure plays a crucial role in the functioning of a vacuum by creating a difference in pressure between the inside and outside of the vacuum. This pressure difference allows the vacuum to suck in air or other substances, creating a low-pressure environment inside the vacuum.
the map sensor is on a bracket between the firewall & the inside valve cover. it has a 3 wire plug on it & a vacuum hose that goes to it.