True Vapor Pressure is the pressure of the vapor in equilibrium with the liquid at 100 F (it is equal to the bubble point pressure at 100 F).
No, it is the DIFFERENCE between the true and atmospheric pressures.
True
No atmospheric pressure
True Vapor Pressure is the pressure of the vapor in equilibrium with the liquid at 100 F (it is equal to the bubble point pressure at 100 F)
It's a high-pressure zone with rising air. true or false
Yes, it is true that an equilibrium constant is not changed by a change in pressure.
No, true vapor pressure is the pressure exerted by a vapor in equilibrium with its condensed phase at a given temperature. Absolute pressure refers to the total pressure within a system, including atmospheric pressure. These two concepts are related but not the same.
Winds occur as air moves from high pressure to low pressure.Wind occurs as air moves from a place of low air pressure to a place of high air pressure is a true statement.
true?
True. Boyle's law states that at constant temperature, the volume of a gas is inversely proportional to its pressure. When pressure increases, volume decreases, and vice versa.
yes this is true. this is also why you can get stronger winds if the pressure gradient in the atmospshere is greater
No, in general the opposite is true.