Hot air Expands

Most recent answer: 10/22/2007

Q:
How does hot air expand , and how does cold air contract ?
- Anonymous
A:
What it means for something to be hot is that all the little parts are rattling around intensely. For a gas, that means that the fast-moving molecules will bang into things often and hard. In other words, the gas will exert more pressure on its surroundings. Often, what happens is that the gas pushes things (say balloon walls or neighboring gas) out. That leaves more room for the hot gas. The pressure drops, partly because the expanded gas just doesn’t have as high a density of molecules bumping into things.

If the gas is cooled, its pressure drops, and neighboring things push in until the density is high enough so that the pressure is big enough to equal the pressure of the surroundings.


Mike W.

(published on 10/22/2007)