fullcircle69
Electrical
- Sep 6, 2010
- 20
I am trying to understand what would happen in a certain scenario regarding an internal combustion engine. I am trying to determine why might a cylinder fill with more atmosphere when comparing two atmosphere's that have the same density, but one has higher pressure.
Lets say we have two cylinders that are the same volume and are both sealed under vacuum with a valve. Cylinder A is placed in an atmosphere of an ideal gas that is at 70F and 29inHg. Cylinder B is placed in another atmosphere that is 80F and 29.5inHg. So both atmosphere have the same gas DENSITY.
So now if you open both valves for the same amount of time, do both containers fill with the same amount of air?
Lets say we have two cylinders that are the same volume and are both sealed under vacuum with a valve. Cylinder A is placed in an atmosphere of an ideal gas that is at 70F and 29inHg. Cylinder B is placed in another atmosphere that is 80F and 29.5inHg. So both atmosphere have the same gas DENSITY.
So now if you open both valves for the same amount of time, do both containers fill with the same amount of air?