Not exact matches
This also coincides with ETF
flows —
heavy liquidations towards the end of last year have been succeeded by net inflows this year, but
volumes lag considerably compared to the same period in 2016.
The parking lot has been shifted so it is perpendicular to the ocean and the floodplain has been opened up, so that should a large rain event occur, the lagoon will be able to handle the
heavy volumes of water that
flow down Redwood Creek and out to the Pacific.
Firstly convection of the real gas Air which when heated becomes lighter than air and rises taking away heat from the surface and as it rises
heavier colder air above
flows beneath to take its place; these are called winds,
volumes of air on the move.
So on condensation, under the still rising hotter lighter air carrying on doing its thing and perhaps adding new layers, there would be the accompanying
volume and temperature decrease of that first previously rising lighter
volume now
heavier liquid water and added to by the adjacent
volumes of
heavier colder air
flowing beneath the still rising lighter hotter and into the space now available on condensation of its neighbour, which all now being
heavier will increase the pressure at the surface as they all sink together displacing the lighter.
The molecule will first use the heat energy in expansion and on cooling will again condense and sink because
heavier, and it will cool when its heat expanded
volume flows to colder air which absorbs the heat, the internal kinetic energy of vibration, which if strong enough will pass that heat to another colder (which is why visible light is not a thermal energy, it is not powerful enough to move a molecule of matter into vibration, it takes the bigger heat wave, longwave infrared, aka thermal infrared called that because it is the wavelength of heat)-- that is how convective heating warms the fluid gas air in a room, by circulation, in the rise and fall of molecules as they expand and condense, not by heat energy propelling molecules to hit other molecules..
, when
volumes of air are heated they expand and now lighter than air rise taking away heat from the surface, and colder
volumes of air, of the fluid gas air around them, being
heavier because colder so more condensed will sink to the surface
flowing beneath the
volumes of less dense air.