A solution under a high pressure
A solution under high pressure will have more gas dissolved in it than one under low pressure.
A solution under a high pressure
A solution under a high pressure
A solution under high pressure will have more gas dissolved into it.
the solution with higher pressure would have more gas in it that the one with low pressure.
Increasing the pressure the solubility is also increasing.
A sol'n under HIGH pressure has more gas in it. The high pressure is working against the much smaller vapor pressure of the liquid. If they equal then the liquid is at it's boiling point. Additionally applying pressure to a solution keeps dissolved gasses inside the solution such as Oxygen or Carbon Dioxide (Think of a Cola can. It is stored under pressure and the fizz stays in the liquid. Then you open the can and release the high pressure and the carbon dioxide starts to bubble out of the solution. It was not doing this before you opened the can and lowered the overall pressure)
No. Dissolved gasses trapped under pressure provide the force.
If u are on a workbook page and you are in Science 6 and live in Cali, and working on a chart, you answer is "Dissolved gasses under pressure are trapped in magma underground" Nicky Dicky Anwered this question
Because the carbon dioxide is dissolved under pressure. When the cap is removed the pressure decreases , thus removing any gas that is dissolved under pressure.
The solubility of gases in liquids increase when pressure increase.
If gas comes out of solution when a bottle is opened, then there must have been a greater amount of dissolved gas in the substance while it was under pressure prior to opening the bottle.