Pressures simply add. If the partial pressure of gas is three and the partial pressure of water is five, the total pressure is eight. Find the partial pressure for water at the temperature of your experiment, subtract it from your pressure reading. As an aside, if you've corked your glassware rather than using a slider or a water bath, expect stupid results.
The partial pressure of water (vapor) is included in the total pressure of the atmosphere (air) when boiling.
0.107 atm
The pressure of each gas in a mixture is called the partial pressure of that gas.
Water activity refers to a ratio. This ratio consists of the water's vapor pressure divided by the water's standard state partial vapor pressure.
From Wikipedia, article "relative humidity": "It is defined as the ratio of the partial pressure of water vapor in the air-water mixture to the saturated vapor pressure of water at the prescribed temperature." So, you somehow measure the partial pressure of water vapor, look up the saturated vapor pressure of water for the current temperature, and take the ratio.
The partial pressure is the pressure exerted by just one gas in the mixture.
The partial pressure is the pressure exerted by just one gas in the mixture.
The partial pressure is the pressure exerted by just one gas in the mixture.
The partial pressure is the pressure exerted by just one gas in the mixture.
The partial pressure of SO4 in a bottle of NO2, CO2, and SO2, is 7.32 atm.
i would love to answer that, but it's your homework.