Yes, heat from a candle can increase the air pressure inside a sealed bag. As the air inside the bag heats up, it expands and creates higher pressure. This effect is commonly demonstrated in simple science experiments.
Yes, atmospheric pressure acts on both sides of the plunger in a sealed syringe. The pressure outside the syringe applies force on the outer surface, while the pressure inside the syringe is influenced by the contents within. If the plunger is pushed or pulled, the pressure difference between the inside and outside can create a force that moves the plunger. However, in a sealed environment, the pressure inside can change based on the volume of the fluid inside the syringe.
Yes, the pressure in the ocean can potentially change the shape of a glass bottle. The external water pressure increases the deeper you go in the ocean, which can lead to the bottle being compressed or deformed due to the difference in pressure inside and outside the bottle.
Our bodies are made to withstand the atmospheric pressure around us. This pressure is evenly distributed inside and outside our bodies, so we don't get crushed. Additionally, our body tissues contain fluids that help balance the internal pressure.
Changing the color of the container will not affect the pressure inside it. Pressure is determined by factors such as temperature, volume, and the number of gas molecules present, not by the container's color.
Increased pressure on the inside, or decreased pressure on the outside.
The pressure will increase
Yes the pressure drops as the tornado forms and progresses. The tornado's lowest pressure is in the center.
Both temperature and pressure increase.
The pressure inside an oxygen tank changes due to the release of oxygen gas as it is used. As the oxygen is depleted, the volume of gas decreases, leading to a drop in pressure. Conversely, filling the tank with more oxygen increases the pressure inside.
Calucus
nested if Statement
systolic to diastolic
it is inside your trans
Deformation occurs
If the space in which the gas is inside doesn't change, the volume of gas doesn't change
Assuming the tank was not in a vacuum, the VOLUME stays constant. The volume is the total area inside the tank. The pressure would change when 'pumped up'. The volume would not. The pressure inside would also change based on the temperature, relative to the outside pressure.