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Why is it that heat rises?
Question
#72981. Asked by rainbowgirl44. (Dec 06 06 11:24 AM)
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zbeckabee

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Let us think about why some things sink and some things float in water. A thing will float if it ways less than the water it displaces. Let us imagine you have a slice of white bread. If you put in water, it
will float. Now take another slice of white bread and SQUEEZE it into a tiny little dough ball. Put that ball in water and it sinks. It is the same amount of bread - it ways the same - but it is denser. Now back to your question. When you heat air, it expands. When you cool air, it "shrinks" (like the bread being SQUEEZED). The hot air is less dense than the cold air, so it floats - or rises above the cold air.
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/phy99/phy99253.htm
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TheuntouchablE
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Because as heat rises, air expands. The giher you go in a mounatin, this happens.
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What-A-Mess
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Less dense than cold air. Hot air does not rise! Cold air displaces the hot air (settles) causing lift!
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