use a tire gauge to measure that ,but it is not very much air if it's in a automobile tire.
The tire heats up do to the friction with the road, a heated gas in a set volume will increase in pressure.
The air in the tire is becoming heated due to the tires friction on the road surface. Heated air increases the pressure in the tire
Nothing, an automobile tire is a pneumatic tire.
about 8 to 10 lbs because of such a large tire and a height volume of air
You answered your own question. It is 34 pounds per square inch. The volume of air that is depends on the size of the tire.
When you pump air into a tire, you are increasing the number of air molecules inside the tire's confined space. As more air is added, these molecules collide more frequently with the tire walls, leading to an increase in pressure. This rise in air pressure is a result of the gas laws, specifically Boyle's law, which states that at a constant temperature, the pressure of a gas increases as its volume decreases. Therefore, the confined volume of the tire limits the space for the air, resulting in higher pressure.
When air is pumped into a tire at a constant temperature, the pressure increases because the volume of the tire decreases as more air is added. This causes the air molecules to be more tightly packed together, resulting in higher pressure within the tire.
When air is compressed into a tire, its density increases because the same amount of air molecules are now packed into a smaller volume. This increase in density helps maintain the tire's pressure and support the vehicle's weight.
No. What you are doing to the cream is introducing air to the material. Just like adding air to an automobile tire, the air does not produce a chemical change.
No, inflating a bike tire is a physical change because it does not change the chemical composition of the tire or the air being pumped into it. When air is added to the tire, it simply increases in volume and pressure without altering its chemical properties.
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