The volume of the container becomes the volume of the gas. The molecules in gases are in constant motion with direction, this causes the initial volume to expand to the volume of the container since the molecules eventually disperse to every region of the container.
The stay in the container and don't react. They would probably mix and both contribute a partial pressure that together equals the external pressure.
b'cos it depends on the viscocity of these liquid.
Eventually it will explode because the heat causes the gas particles inside the container to accelerate and thus, create pressure by colliding with each other and the sides of the container. This pressure --> boom.
because the other half is not empty it is filled with gas
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.
To not have anything that was not supposed to react with the chemicals in the container. Example: Oxygen, and other gases in the air reacting with an experiment that you are working on.
Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter (with solid, liquid and plasma being the other states). It has the distinction of taking both the shape and the volume of the container that it is in. If you want to include plasma, that too will expand - acting like a gas. So will supercritical fluids which might be considered gases by some definitions, but not by others..
yes,but there are other factors such as pressure to consider.
maintain their own shape and do not take the shape of their container.
One tube from the hand pump should be placed inside of the liquid that is to be siphoned. The other tube should be placed in an empty bucket or other container. The pump should then be squeezed and released to move the liquid from the container that it is currently in into the other empty container.
Noble gases do not react chemically with other noble gases.
Gases will expand or contract to the volume of the container they are in, so gases do. However, liquids have fixed volumes, so they do not. In other words, a liter of water will remain a liter of water whether it is in a bucket or a swimming pool. However, the same quantity of gas may have different volumes depending on the container.
Gases mix together when they contact each other. There are no immiscible gases like there are immiscible fluids.
No, like other vapours and gases steam assumes the shape of any container it is enclosed in.
Noble gases are placed in the group 18 of the periodic table of elements; from about 50 years noble gases are not considered as totally inert elements.
If a liquid is not in a container it will evaporate.
Wisconsin
It has no shape and size and takes the shape of anything. gases are random groups of atoms.
'This is because the air particles are bumpinginto each other and the walls. When this happens it causes pressure on the walls because of the speed the air particles are moving