Want this question answered?
the air would be trapped in the measuring cylinder. basically, nothing would happen
The air pressure would reduce.
-- It would float in the water, with part of it above the surface. -- It would hang just below the surface, or at whatever depth you placed it. -- It would sink down through the water like a rock.
Refracted. My bad typo.
Water would fill completely the entire space of the bottle. During this process you could see air bubbles coming out through that hole
Filled with air
Everyone on earth would drown.
If the air in the in the upper atmosphere were warmer than the water vapor that was continued in the air would make the earth colder in the air.
You would drown. water pressure > air pressure. water either pushes air out or your lungs collapse. also, you don't have gills.
the air would be trapped in the measuring cylinder. basically, nothing would happen
it would evaporate into the air in the room
it would die ! @
It is impossible for the water vapour in the air to be at a different temperature from the air of which it is a part. However warm air can hold more water vapour than cool air. Thus when air is warming up there are unlikely to be any clouds (clouds are caused by water vapour condensing out of air).
The air pressure would reduce.
it would have to get colder for the water molucules to shrink and more to come in and it woluld allow more space
It would sit there beached on the Sea of Tranquility, becalmed by the fact that there is neither air nor water on the Moon.
I guess it would be about the same as if you were put in water and then you were skinned and pulled out of the water to be back in the air. I guess you wouldn't feel too good hey?