Water vapor is a gas so it is in the air. Nitrogen and nitrogen are in the air too, but there is more nitrogen than anything in the air. I believe it rises because it is lighter, like a balloon filled with helium.
No, the more water vapor the air contains, the lighter it is. When water vapor enters the atmosphere, it pushes out an equal volume of dry air. A cubic meter of dry air is 99 percent nitrogen and oxygen. A cubic meter of humid air with 2 percent water vapor is only 97 percent nitrogen and oxygen. Water vapor is lighter than the nitrogen and oxygen it pushed out. Therefore, humid air weighs less than dry air and exerts less pressure.
i think it is petroleum
Nitrogen, Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Water Vapor
The main atmospheric gases in the troposphere are: nitrogen(76-79%), oxygen (24-21%), and carbon dioxide (0.03%).
Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Argon.
humid air is lighter that an equal volume of dry air at the same temperature.
As water vapor increases, pressure decreases due to the fact that water is made up of hydrogen and oxygen, which is lighter than what most of the air is made out of, oxygen and nitrogen.
a falling barometric reading often means rainy weather
No, the more water vapor the air contains, the lighter it is. When water vapor enters the atmosphere, it pushes out an equal volume of dry air. A cubic meter of dry air is 99 percent nitrogen and oxygen. A cubic meter of humid air with 2 percent water vapor is only 97 percent nitrogen and oxygen. Water vapor is lighter than the nitrogen and oxygen it pushed out. Therefore, humid air weighs less than dry air and exerts less pressure.
Oxygen o2 only is slighty heavyer than air. o3(ozone) is around the same weight as o2 ,but the ozone layer is at a hiegher altitude because it is created when o2 come in contact with high amounts of UV rays.
No. The wind is composed of a small amount of water vapor and about 20% oxygen and about 80% nitrogen. The water vapor may freeze but the oxygen and the nitrogen cannot freeze at the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Oxygen has a much lower freezing point than liquid nitrogen and if the nitrogen were to be frozen, liquid nitrogen is not cold enough to freeze it...sort of like trying to make ice using cold water.
Yes, Air is a mixture of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and pollutants.
i think it is petroleum
nitrogen, oxygen, argon, water vapor, carbon dioxide.
Nitrogen, oxygen, argon, water vapor, CO2.
nitrogen, oxygen, argon, water vapor, carbon dioxide.
Nitrogen Oxygen Carbon dioxide Water vapor Argon