It doesn't. It just takes that amount of energy to climb to that altitude.
the higher you are the more the density decreases
Yes, there is typically more pressure the higher you go in terms of altitude or hierarchy.
Leaving aside the temperature variable, ice melts more rapidly under higher air pressures. The higher the altitude, the lower the air pressure, and the more slowly ice is going to melt.
Altitude, the higher the altitude the lower the pressure. Water evaporates more quickly at low pressures
No, at a higher altitude there is less atmospheric pressure pushing on the contents of the can and the contents inside the can will expand and you would have more.
The same way it works at any altitude - by forcing more air into the combustion chamber, allowing the engine to burn more fuel and making more power.
When the altitude increases, the air pressure decreases (or "GOES DOWN") and vice versa. This is due to the fact that air is affected by gravity, therefore there is more of it at a lower altitude than at a higher altitude.
Typically, the temperature is cooler at higher altitudes because the air is less dense and there is less pressure. This results in a decrease in temperature with increasing altitude due to adiabatic cooling as the air rises and expands.
Not necessarily. Solar panels generate electricity based on the amount of sunlight they receive, not their elevation. However, at higher altitudes, there may be less atmospheric interference which could potentially result in slightly increased efficiency in some cases.
Gas molecules at higher altitudes have higher kinetic energy due to increased temperature, not altitude itself. As you move higher in the atmosphere, the temperature decreases, which lowers the average kinetic energy of gas molecules.
Yes, stadiums with higher altitude can make the ball travel farther because the air is less dense at higher altitudes. This means there is less air resistance, allowing the ball to travel through the air more easily and potentially go higher.
The intensity of insolation is affected by the altitude of the sun; the higher the sun is in the sky (higher altitude), the more direct the solar radiation is, resulting in higher intensity. When the sun is lower in the sky, the sunlight has to pass through a greater thickness of the Earth's atmosphere, which can scatter and absorb some of the radiation, reducing its intensity.