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Gravity holds the atmosphere in place. In fact, it perfectly balances the upward pressure gradient force (air pressure decreases as you go up in the atmosphere, causing a gradient that would otherwise generate a VERY strong wind upward). This is called hydrostatic equilibrium.
There is none.
The movement of water and electrolytes is primarily regulated between fluid compartments by hydrostatic pressure and osmotic pressure.
no relation iz between molecular weight and movement which iz a function of temperature only.
Both are large scale circulations in the atmosphere created by pressure differences. A cyclone has a low pressure center and an anticyclone has a high pressure center.
There is definitely a strong relation between osmosis pressure and water activity. Osmosis is the movement of water from high pressure to low pressure.
Atmospheric pressure is the surrounding pressure around us. We live in the atmosphere and treat the atmospheric pressure as the base pressure. A pressure gauge would read 0 at atmospheric pressure. When we define the pressure in scientific way of absolute pressure, we need to add up an atmospheric pressure to the measured pressure.
Friction is directly proportional to pressure.
Gravity holds the atmosphere in place. In fact, it perfectly balances the upward pressure gradient force (air pressure decreases as you go up in the atmosphere, causing a gradient that would otherwise generate a VERY strong wind upward). This is called hydrostatic equilibrium.
Pressure is defined as force per area
u have to move in sports!
Pressure decreases as height increases and vice-versa.
Pressure = force / area
There is none.
The water cycle involves the movement of water between the atmosphere, land, and oceans. The carbon cycle involves the movement of carbon between the atmosphere, oceans, and living organisms. The nitrogen cycle involves the movement of nitrogen between the atmosphere, soil, and living organisms.
Pressure. Do a Google search on the relation between volcanoes and pressure, or even your question.
The hydrologic cycle.