By increasing the density of a gas its air pressure will subsequently increase.
To measure the density of a gas you find the mass and volume, then divide the volume by the mass.
As a solid (dry ice) the density is around 1.56 kg/litre, or 1560 g/litre. The density at 0'C in its gas form is around 1.98 g/litre. So the density of CO2 in gas from is around 800 times less dense.
High density since it is obvious it would be harder to rip, tear, or ruin
it's density/phase is a gas. and it's atomic weight is 18.998403 and density is 0.001696
High density is a characteristic of a Gas. When something has a high density it means there is a lot of a certain gas, in one area.
no
This is a gas with high density.
No, the density is too high.
Plutonium is a high-density metal, hydrogen a low-density gas.
Low density, no shape, high compressibility
If you are referring to a high pressure gas, then yes. The higher the pressure, the higher the density of the gas because the molecules pack closer together. The density of liquids can also be affected by pressure but to much less of an extent. For most purposes, liquids such as water are considered incompressible.
Hydrogen gas has 0.000089 ml Helium gas has 0.00018 ml Air has 0.00128 ml Carbon dioxide has 0.001977 ml water has 1.00 ml
The difference is that,an oil is a dark viscous liquid with high density and low rate of diffusion why gas is a well pronounce substance with low density and rate of diffusion. The difference is that,an oil is a dark viscous liquid with high density and low rate of diffusion why gas is a well pronounce substance with low density and rate of diffusion.
rate of diffusion is inversely proposnal to density, density of gas is less. so diffusion rate is high
Gas like every other thing in the universe, has density. Solid is very dense, liquid is dense but not as dense as a solid. Therefore, if everything in the universe has a density rate, a gas does have density, however, just a very low density.
You are asking for comparatives. Each state can be any when compared to another state except the extremes. Liquid or gas either lower or higher depending on what you compare it to.