QUESTION IMAGE
Question
this image shows warm air from the radiator rising towards the ceiling. why does this happen? a the warm air is denser than the cool air b there are more molecules in the cool air than in the warm air c the warm air is less dense than the cool air d there are more molecules in the warm air than in the cool air
Brief Explanations
To determine why warm air from the radiator rises, we analyze the density of air with temperature:
- When air is heated (like by a radiator), its molecules gain energy, move faster, and spread out. This decreases the air’s density (mass per unit volume).
- Cooler air is denser (molecules are closer together). Less dense substances (warm air) rise above denser substances (cool air) because of buoyancy.
Now, evaluate the options:
- Option A: Incorrect. Warm air is less dense than cool air, not more.
- Option B: Incorrect. The number of molecules in a given volume of air depends on pressure and temperature, but the key factor for rising is density (not molecule count in this context). Warm air expands, so in the same volume, cool air has more molecules, but this is not the primary reason for rising.
- Option C: Correct. Warm air is less dense than cool air, so it rises.
- Option D: Incorrect. Warm air expands, so in the same volume, cool air has more molecules (or warm air has fewer), not more.
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C. The warm air is less dense than the cool air