I breathed in air, containing nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, and argon among other things. I drank some fizzy lemonade with carbon dioxide bubbles. I cooked with natural gas which is mainly methane. I passed a shop selling helium balloons. I used some bleach which gave off chlorine. I boiled a kettle of water and steam came out.
Some examples of gases that can be compressed are oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and helium. When these gases are compressed, their volume decreases while the pressure increases.
Some natural gases include methane, ethane, propane, and butane. These gases are primarily composed of hydrocarbons and are commonly found in natural gas reserves. They are often used as energy sources for heating, cooking, and electricity generation.
Generally methane (CH4) is called natural gas; but oxygen, nitrogen, noble gases, hydrogen sulphide, hydrochloric acid, etc. are natural gases.
All gases are compressible (even all fluids and solids are, though much lesser), so there is no special name needed for this group because it is not special.
No - there are many gases that contain more than one or two atoms. Some examples are: Carbon Dioxide: 3 atoms Acetylene: 4 atoms Methane: 5 atoms Ethylene: 6 atoms . . . and the list goes on. It is true though that as the more atoms a molecule consists of, the less likely it is to be a gas at a temperature we are familiar with. Pretty nearly all molecules can be gases if the pressure is low enough and the temperature is high enough (unless they decompose before they can be heated enough to make their vapor pressure exceed the ambient pressure).
Some examples of gases that can be compressed are oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and helium. When these gases are compressed, their volume decreases while the pressure increases.
1. water to evaporation.
Some common combustion analysis problems encountered in the field include incomplete combustion, inaccurate measurement of combustion gases, and difficulty in obtaining representative samples for analysis.
Yes: Oxygen and nitrogen are the most frequently encountered examples.
nitrogen oxygen carbon dioxide
Fluids are materials that have no fixed shape and are free to flow, such as gases. Gases are also fluids.Here are some examples of fluids:WaterBloodAirGasHydrogenHeliumOxygen etc...
There are many examples. At room temperature some examples might be nitrogen, hydrogen, helium, oxygen, neon, etc.
Radon,Argon,Helium just to name a few
farts
Many gases are colourless, but not all. Some examples :chlorine - yellowish greenbromine - reddish browniodine - violet
Some examples of non-fluids are solids (such as ice, wood, and metal) and gases (such as air, oxygen, and carbon dioxide). These substances do not flow and have definite shapes or volumes.
oxygen carbon dioxide nitrogen and other gases bromine etc.