vapors are a gas like substance which is made out of multiple kinds of atoms, but gas is a gas which is made out of a single substance.
example: water vapor: Hydrogen + oxygen
Gas : Oxygen gas : Oxygen
Yes, gases and vapors are compressible because their particles are further apart and more easily squeezed together. This allows them to occupy a smaller volume under pressure.
The vapors produced when materials burn are a mixture of gases and particulates released during combustion. These vapors can include carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor, and other byproducts depending on the material being burned. Incomplete combustion can produce toxic gases that are harmful to health and the environment.
The molecular weight of the gas or vapor plays a key role in determining whether it is lighter or heavier than air. Gases or vapors with lower molecular weights are typically lighter than air and will rise, while those with higher molecular weights are heavier and tend to sink. Temperature and pressure can also impact the behavior of gases and vapors relative to air.
Smoke is a mixture of gases, solid particle, liquid particles, water vapors and air.
These gases are: nitrogen (78,084 %), oxygen (20,9476 %), water vapors (variable concentration), argon (0,934 %), carbon dioxide (0,0314).
Vapors and gases differ in their physical states and how they are formed. Vapors are substances in a gaseous state that are typically created from liquids or solids at a specific temperature and pressure, while gases exist naturally in a gaseous state. These differences can be distinguished by their origins and conditions under which they exist.
The molecules remain identical (for example ice, water, vapors).
Water Vapors.
Yes, gases and vapors are compressible because their particles are further apart and more easily squeezed together. This allows them to occupy a smaller volume under pressure.
These gases are nitrogen, oxygen, argon, other noble gases, carbon dioxide, water vapors.
They sink below the air.
Gases and vapors can easily disperse in the air, leading to inhalation exposure, whereas solids typically require physical contact for exposure. Gases and vapors can also be odorless and colorless, making them harder to detect. Additionally, gases and vapors can ignite or explode if exposed to an ignition source, posing a more immediate danger.
The vapors produced when materials burn are a mixture of gases and particulates released during combustion. These vapors can include carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor, and other byproducts depending on the material being burned. Incomplete combustion can produce toxic gases that are harmful to health and the environment.
The premise of the question is incorrect, so "why" is irrelevant. You appear to be making a novel distinction between "vapors" and "gases" that I have never heard before.
The molecular weight of the gas or vapor plays a key role in determining whether it is lighter or heavier than air. Gases or vapors with lower molecular weights are typically lighter than air and will rise, while those with higher molecular weights are heavier and tend to sink. Temperature and pressure can also impact the behavior of gases and vapors relative to air.
Cooking technically adds greenhouse gases. The vapors and gases produced through the cooking process do add to greenhouse gases, but certain methods of cooking are worse than others.
Smoke is a mixture of gases, solid particle, liquid particles, water vapors and air.