What is Gas: Definition and 1000 Discussions

Gas is one of the four fundamental states of matter (the others being solid, liquid, and plasma). A pure gas may be made up of individual atoms (e.g. a noble gas like neon), elemental molecules made from one type of atom (e.g. oxygen), or compound molecules made from a variety of atoms (e.g. carbon dioxide). A gas mixture, such as air, contains a variety of pure gases. What distinguishes a gas from liquids and solids is the vast separation of the individual gas particles. This separation usually makes a colorless gas invisible to the human observer. The interaction of gas particles in the presence of electric and gravitational fields are considered negligible, as indicated by the constant velocity vectors in the image.
The gaseous state of matter occurs between the liquid and plasma states, the latter of which provides the upper temperature boundary for gases. Bounding the lower end of the temperature scale lie degenerative quantum gases which are gaining increasing attention.
High-density atomic gases super-cooled to very low temperatures are classified by their statistical behavior as either Bose gases or Fermi gases. For a comprehensive listing of these exotic states of matter see list of states of matter.

View More On Wikipedia.org
  1. V

    Do Different Volumes of Helium Affect Molecular Speed in Balloons?

    Homework Statement [/B] Two balloons with Helium gas are filled, first with 10 liters of He and second with 20 liters. Molecules of which balloon will be moving faster as compared to the other? Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution Speed of molecules is directly proportional to...
  2. J

    Ideal gas temperature proportional to absolute temperature

    Homework Statement I[/B] have some difficulties proving that the ideal gas temperature is directly proportional to absolute temperature defined by the second law of thermodynamics. Homework Equations The ideal gas temp. is defined by the ideal gas equation: pV=NkTi(T), where k is Boltzmann's...
  3. G

    Ideal Gas Density: PV=mRT Explained

    Homework Statement in this notes , i was told that the PV=mRT , why ? shouldn't PV= NRT , N=number of moles ? it should be PV = m/M (RT) , right ? Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution
  4. D

    A quick question on RMS speed of gas molecules

    Homework Statement As attached. Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution I chose A but the correct answer is E.(Actually I thought both of them were correct) From the graph provided,it is clear that the turning point corresponds to the largest proportion of molecules,so is the corresponding...
  5. Stephanus

    What is the Standard Enthalpy of Water?

    Dear PF Forum, As per wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_enthalpy_change_of_formation_(data_table) Standard enthalpy of water: Gas: -241.818 kJ/mol Liquid: -285.8 kj/mol What does it means? That to produce H2O per mol at 1000C, it releases 241.818 kJ. That to produce H2O per mol in...
  6. B

    What does cold hydrogen gas emit at 1420 MHz?

    I just read Paul Davies book The Eerie Silence. In The Eerie Silence, Paul Davies asserts that the radio astronomers looking for radio signals from extraterrestrial civilizations search for radio signals at the frequency 1420 MHz because that is the emission frequency for cold hydrogen gas...
  7. K

    Solve Van der Waals Gas Homework: a) & b)

    Homework Statement Hi, I have the following task: Translated into English, that means: " For Cpm and Cvm of gases the following relationship is true: (1) a) Show with the relationship (1), that for an ideal gas Cpm - Cvm = R is valid b) Deduce from equation (1) and the tripple product rule...
  8. S

    Help with Thermodynamics and Gas Law

    THE PROBLEM: A steam engine's boiler completely converts 2638 g of water at 83.7 °C to steam at 195.4 °C. The steam, at a constant pressure of 3.28 Pa, expands by pushing a piston of radius 9.4 cm a distance of 8.3 cm. What is the change in internal energy of the water-steam system? MY WORK...
  9. W

    Finding work of adiabatic compressor using ideal gas

    Homework Statement Methane at ## P_1 ## and ## T_1 ## is compressed to a pressure of ## P_2 ## adiabatically at steady-state. Calculate the work done on the compressor and the temperature ## T_2 ## of the discharge gas. Use ideal gas model. Given: ## T_1, P_1, P_2, C_p, \gamma = 1.4 ## ##...
  10. C

    Is there always a liquid surface between a solid and gas?

    So I'm reading that ice (solid) always has a liquid surface if it's surrounded by a gas. Does this mean every solid (e.g., my dining room table) also has a liquid surface because it's surrounded by gas? It doesn't seem to have a liquid surface. :-/ If something sublimes it skips this phase so I...
  11. 1729

    Problem involving gas laws and hydrostatics

    Homework Statement A glass tube filled with air at room temperature is 1.54m long. The tube is closed on one end, and open on the other. When submerging the open end in water, the water in the tube rises by 0.14m. How much of the tube is above the water's surface? The correct answer is 0.40m...
  12. T

    Thistle tube height when setting up gas generator

    For a gas generator like this, I have seen diagrams of the thistle tube in the water, below the other tube or above it, where is it meant to be? Also, where is the other tube meant to be because I have seen it in multiple positions. Thanks!
  13. Mr Tompkins

    Wikipedia.org -- Protons captured by neutral gas atoms?

    A quote from wikipedia: "At sufficiently low temperatures, free protons will bind to electrons. However, the character of such bound protons does not change, and they remain protons. A fast proton moving through matter will slow by interactions with electrons and nuclei, until it is captured by...
  14. Cora

    Ideal Gas Expansion State Properties & Exergy Balance

    Homework Statement Two well-insulated rigid tanks of equal volume, tank A and tank B, are connected via a valve. Tank A is initially empty. Tank B has 2 kg of Argon at 350 K and 5000 kPa. The valve is opened and the Argon fills both tanks. State 2 is the final equilibrium state. The temperature...
  15. M

    Gas Lasers: What Makes Them Work?

    My question is very basic concerning gas lasers. I wanted clarification that a gas laser gets its light from a cell containing only that gas with a few other constituents and a high voltage being applied to it. Basically I'd like to understand what is happening with a CO2 laser and why it...
  16. R

    Method for bubbling gas into a liquid at a specific rate?

    If there are any experimentalists out there maybe you could help? I need to bubble gas through a liquid at ~80 mL/min is there a specific instrument designed to do this? I'm assuming it's some sort of pump, what would it be called in a chemistry lab? Thank you for any suggestions / help.
  17. C

    Archimedes principle and passing gas

    I used a tub for my hemorrhoid. I learned the archimedes principle which the buoyant force is equal to the mass of water displaced. The tub was filled with water 4/5. I accidently farted in a tub and suddenly the water flew into the hole which is located on the top of tub.does the fart gas...
  18. T

    More moles of gas per moles of material reaction

    Good evening, I'm an undergraduate astrophysics student currently doing research, and I wanted to get the opinion of some knowledgable chemists about a particular reaction my professor and I wish to emulate. Using a specific type of laser (Nd: YAG, for example), I'd like to mimic something...
  19. Monsterboy

    Specific Heat of an Ideal Gas: Temperature vs. Molecular Weight and Structure

    Homework Statement Does the specific heat of an ideal gas depend on the temperature only or does it depend on molecular weight and structure ? or both ? Homework Equations PV=mRT , Cp -Cv=R The Attempt at a Solution One of my teachers said it depends only on temperature and the other said...
  20. T

    What is the energy content of natural gas on an LNG transporter?

    My brother is working on an LNG transporter and I would like to know how much energy there is in the LNG the ship is transporting, here is the info I got : Methane ISO6974 99.8518 mole% ethane 0.0137 mole% propane 0.0000 mole% i-butane 0.0000 mole% n-butane 0.0000 mole% i-Pentane 0.0000 mole%...
  21. K

    Finding the mass of a quantity of gas given P, V, T

    Homework Statement A welder using a tank of volume 8.00×10−2 m^3 fills it with oxygen (with a molar mass of 32.0 g/mol ) at a gauge pressure of 3.10×105 Pa and temperature of 38.9 ∘C. The tank has a small leak, and in time some of the oxygen leaks out. On a day when the temperature is 23.0 ∘C...
  22. K

    Solving a Physics Problem: Work Done by OR on a Gas

    Homework Statement Homework Equations no The Attempt at a Solution no Since the problem asks how much work was done by OR on the gas, I did not understand why the book's answer is 162 J instead ±81 J that I've found. (sorry my bad english) Sorry, the correct question on the problem is how...
  23. I

    How does a vacuum pump push gas out of a container?

    Precisely how does a vacuum pump take the gas, let's just assume air, out of a container?
  24. gjonesy

    Passive smoking versus Radon gas attributed deaths

    I got into a discussion with a friend about the risk of second hand smoke, so I did some research and found the statistical data that is some what puzzling. according to what I have read passive smoke kills 7,000 people each year. Radon gas is responsible for 21,000 deaths per year. There are...
  25. erbilsilik

    A Fugacity of Ideal Bose Gas: Exploring the Connection to Chemical Potential

    We know that the average occupation number cannot be negative for all systems and chemical potential must be negative in Ideal Bose Gas. This fact leads us to arrive a conclusion for fugacity which is related by chemical potential, as I quoted below: The restriction of the fugacity to the...
  26. S

    How would I calculate the work done by the gas molecules?

    Homework Statement Hello, I just need help figuring out how to calculate the work done by the gas molecules for my physics homework :) Formula given: W=Px∆V (W=work, P=pressure, and V=volume) What I know: So my calculated volume is 1.7x10^-22m^3. Pressure=0.25 A t m (atmospheric pressure) I...
  27. M

    Specific Heat Capacity for Gas

    So I have a question regarding the specific heat capacities in thermodynamics. In general the specific heat capacities for a gas (or gas mixture in thermo-chemical equilibrium) can be expressed as, ## c_p = \left(\frac{\partial h}{\partial T}\right)_p \qquad \text{and} \qquad c_v=...
  28. D

    Solving Gas Chamber Problem: Pressure Equality in 3 Compartments

    Homework Statement Consider a rectangular isolated(non-conducting) chamber as shown below. The chamber is divided into three compartments. The wall separating A and B has negligible mass, no friction and is conducting, while the wall separating B and C has negligible mass and friction and is...
  29. B

    Why can’t transverse waves travel through a gas or liquid?

    Homework Statement Why can’t transverse waves travel through a gas or liquid? Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution I understand that transverse waves require rigid medium through which to transfer their energy so they can travel through solids. I'll just accept that transverse waves can...
  30. H

    Work Done by Gas: Ideal Diatomic Process

    Homework Statement A 1.00 mol sample of an ideal diatomic gas at a pressure of 1.00 atm and temperature of 420 K undergoes a process in which its pressure increases linearly with temperature. The final temperature and pressure are 720 K and 1.60 atm. Determine the work done by this gas during...
  31. madhusoodan

    Is Platinum the Preferred Material for Micro-Heater Fabrication in Gas Sensors?

    what is reason for preferring platinum in micro-heater fabrication in the case of a gas sensor ? my understanding is that it is because of its stability in different chemical environments. Please comment if there are any other reasons
  32. O

    Pressure calculation for compressible gas and variable 'g'

    I have what seems like a straight forward question, but am unable to find a formula. The question originates from my previous topic which was trolled: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/blowing-up-a-balloon-using-centrifugal-force.848892/ Basically I have a 1.5m hollow length of 10mm tube...
  33. F

    Question about Fermi's gas effective mass.

    Hi everybody; today I was reading some problems about a metal and the electrons of the conduction band; the man who solved them used the mass of the electron as effective mass (m*). I don't know why he did that; I have investigated but I don't have fount an explanation. Can somebody please...
  34. K

    Did the Pressure of a Monatomic Gas Change During Isentropic Heating?

    Homework Statement A sample containing 3.65 mol of a monatomic ideal gas is heated from 289K to 458K, and the entropy remains constant. If the initial volume of the sample was 0.0980m^2, by what factor did the pressure increase or decrease during this process? Homework EquationsThe Attempt at...
  35. A

    Entropy Difference of an Unknown Gas (not an ideal gas)

    Homework Statement Temperature, pressure and volume measurements performed on 1 kg of a simple compressible substance in three stable equilibrium states yield the following results. State 1 (T1=400 C , V1= 0,10 m3, P1=3 MPa) State 2 (T1=400 C , V1= 0,08 m3, P1=3,5 MPa) State 3 (T1=500 C , V1=...
  36. Hijaz Aslam

    Molar Specific Heat (gas) at varying pressure and volume?

    I've read in my texts that the there are two kinds of Molar Specific Heat Capacities for gases: 1. Molar Specific Heat Capacity at constant Volume ----- ##C_v## 2. Molar Specific Heat Capacity at constant Pressure ---- ##C_p## And in case of Constant temperature there is no point in...
  37. E

    Torque of rotating coaxial cylinders with gas between them.

    I was going through a worked example in book "Concepts in Thermal Physics" by S.J. Blundell and K.M.Blundell. The example talks about measuring viscosity of a gas between two coaxial cylinders. Homework Statement Two vertical coaxial cylinders. Outer cylinders is rotated by a motor at constant...
  38. K

    What is the change in entropy ΔS of the gas?

    Homework Statement Two moles of an ideal gas undergo a reversible isothermal expansion from 3.37×10−2m3 to 4.29×10−2m3 at a temperature of 29.6 ∘C. What is the change in entropy ΔS of the gas? Homework Equations pV=nRT The Attempt at a Solution W=∫V2V1pdV, I don't know how to use this...
  39. W

    Does Increasing Molecules in a Constant Temperature Container Affect Pressure?

    Homework Statement If number of molecules in a closed container increases and it is kept at a constant tempurature, what happens to the pressure? I was confused because I thought if you add molecules the temputature would go up so keeping temputature a constant would have no affect on the...
  40. ajayguhan

    Piston effort=load due to gas alone?

    In my book it is mentioned that piston effort along the line of stroke=(Force due to gas pressure)+(Inertia force) why we have to consider inertia force when it is a imaginary force which is considered only during non inertial frame? why we don't equate piston effort with gas force simple...
  41. Luis Obis

    Isobaric process for a Van der Waals gas

    Homework Statement [/B] You are asked to calculate changes in internal energy, entropy, heat transferred and work done for each of the following process. Also you are asked to calculate "the latent heat for the isotherm in the figure". We know the a and b parameters which characterize the VdW...
  42. Stephanus

    Volume of 1 Mole O2 & CO2 at Same Temperature & Pressure

    Dear PF Forum, A: 1 mole O2 is roughly 32 grams? 1 mole ozone is roughly 48 grams? 1 mole CO2 is roughly 46 grams? Considering there are isotopes --------------------------------------------------------------- B: Do, at the same temperature and pressure, 1 mole CO2 and 1 mole O2 have the...
  43. avito009

    Why does a cylinder of cooking gas feel heavier?

    We feel a gas cylinder of cooking gas to be heavier if we lift it. But when a kid of 14 kg is lifted it feels a lot easier to lift him than lifting a cylinder of cooking gas weighing 14 kg. Is it because the pressure is low because of larger surface area of the kid?
  44. vetgirl1990

    Adiabatic Expansion of a Gas: Final Pressure-Volume Product Calculation

    Homework Statement A gas consisting of diatomic molecules that can rotate but not oscillate at a given range of temperatures expands adiabatically from pressure of 365Pa and volume of 70m3, doing 101J of work, while expanding to a final volume. What is its final PV (pressure volume) product...
  45. jdawg

    Ideal Gas Entropy Equation Conceptual Question

    Homework Statement I'm having a little trouble knowing when to use the ideal gas equations for entropy vs just the ones like this: (T2/T1)=(p2/p1)^((k-1)/k). I've noticed a pattern in the solutions for my homework( where you're finding isentropic efficiency of turbines and compressors) they...
  46. D

    Optimizing Gas Flow in Capillaries: Calculating Flow Rates in Gas Chromatography

    Can anyone help on this problem encountered in gas chromatography: Two helium incoming gas lines A and B are connected together via a cross-shaped connector to two outlets C and D. All in and out lines are capillaries with diametre in the 0.1-1 mm range and lengths in the 10s of cm to 10s of...
  47. S

    Internal Energy of 1 mole of Ideal Gas

    Homework Statement One litre cylinder contains 1 mole of the ideal gas molecules having the average kinetic energy of 0.1eV. What is the total energy of this gas? Homework Equations W = K + U The Attempt at a Solution I figured because the cylinder is closed, no stated temperature change, or...
  48. Searay330

    Change In Internal Energy Of An Ideal Gas

    An ideal gas is compressed from a volume of Vi = 4.50 L to a volume of Vf = 3.00 L while in thermal contact with a heat reservoir at T = 295 K as in the figure below. During the compression process, the piston moves down a distance of d = 0.120 m under the action of an average external force of...
  49. Stephanus

    Are Noble Gas Compounds Possible?

    Dear PF Forum, Perhaps just yes/no answer would suffice. It's just out of curiosity and I can't find it on web. Or there are no answers :smile: Are there no noble gas compound? There are CH4, CO2, H2, O2 even O3 What about Helium, Argon, Neon? Are there really no compound with noble gas? If...
  50. J

    Kinetic Gas Theory Calculations

    Homework Statement Questions are attached to this thread. Homework Equations P =mv (P is momentum) P = F/A (P is pressure) F = deltaP/delta t (P is momentum) The Attempt at a Solution I have managed to do questions a-e which I was very happy with but then moving onto the extension has made me...
Back
Top