1.977 Kg/m3 (760 mm Hg <=>1.01325 ba; 0°C)
It is in the liquid phase.
1.83 (specific gravity has no units)
1.83g/L
The same as most substances, CO2 must be cooled and put under increased pressure to become a solid. At one atmosphere, CO2 must be cooled to a temperature of -78.5 degrees Celsius to solidify. At height pressures CO2 solidifies at higher temperatures, however solid CO2 never exists at a temperature above -56.4 degrees Celsius.
25 deg. Celsius is about "room temperature," and assuming normal pressure (1atm) carbon dioxide is a gas.
The solubility of sulfur dioxide in water is 94 g/L.
Silicon dioxide has a density of 2.63 g/cm3.
This will vary with the temperature, which is not stated. At a temperature of 0 degrees Celcius and pressure of 1 atmosphere, carbon dioxide has a density of 1.977 kilograms per cubic metre. Now one cubic metre of gas at 4 atmospheres is the same as four cubic metres of gas at 1 atmosphere. Thus there will be 4 x 1.977 = 7.908 kilograms of carbon dioxide in 1 cubic metre at 4 atmospheres and 0 degrees Celcius.
Henry's law constant for Carbon Dioxide at 20 degrees Celsius is: 1,6*10^3 ATM
liquid
The density of carbon dioxide gas at -25.2 degree Celsius and 98.0 kPa is approximately 1.80 kg/m^3.
Venus is the hottest planet. Its average surface temperature is 464 degrees Celsius. Its atmosphere has thick, pale, yellow clouds of carbon dioxide and sulfuric acid.
the state is solid
25 deg. Celsius is about "room temperature," and assuming normal pressure (1atm) carbon dioxide is a gas.
The atmosphere of Venus is vastly different from Earth's in several ways. Venus has a very dense and thick atmosphere composed mostly of carbon dioxide, with trace amounts of other gases like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen. It also has a runaway greenhouse effect, resulting in extreme temperatures of up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius). Additionally, its atmosphere has very high pressure, about 92 times that of Earth's.
The same as most substances, CO2 must be cooled and put under increased pressure to become a solid. At one atmosphere, CO2 must be cooled to a temperature of -78.5 degrees Celsius to solidify. At height pressures CO2 solidifies at higher temperatures, however solid CO2 never exists at a temperature above -56.4 degrees Celsius.
25 deg. Celsius is about "room temperature," and assuming normal pressure (1atm) carbon dioxide is a gas.
The atmosphere of Venus consists mainly of carbon dioxide, and a small amount of nitrogen. The thick cloud cover is composed of sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acid droplets. Due to the dense atmosphere, the surface temperature ranges from 750 to 930 degrees Fahrenheit (398 to 498 Celsius). The surface pressure is 90 times that of Earth. That's like being one kilometer (more than half a mile) under the ocean.
Frozen Carbon Dioxide
The solubility of sulfur dioxide in water is 94 g/L.