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The pressure exerted by one gas in a mixture
The pressure exerted by one gas in a mixture (apex)
Dalton's law
The answer depends on what kind of pressure. If you mean the pressure exerted by gasses on the walls of a container (a balloon, for example), pressure is created by the motion of the molecules of gas. Temperature and density of the molecules are factors. Higher density results in higher pressure. Higher temperature creates more molecular motion, thereby creating higher pressure.
Yes. That is True. Dalton's Law is: that pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is the sum of the pressures exerted independently by each gas in the mixture. Reference: Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb and Hoehn
The pressure that the gas exerts on the walls of any vessel has to do with the force that the particles of gas were exerted as a consequence of their very own kinetic energy. That helps know why the gas does not have to depend on the type of gas.
The pressure exerted by a solid object is in only one direction.
The pressure exerted by a solid object is in only one direction.
The pressure exerted by one gas in a mixture
The pressure exerted by one gas in a mixture
Pressure
is motions of gas particles are related to the pressure exerted by the gas
The pressure exerted by one gas in a mixture (apex)
autmospheric pressure
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.