On terça-feira, 23 de fevereiro de 2016 15:46:44 PST Linus Torvalds wrote: > I don't have any hard data for this, but I think that what the > true capacity test does is let the air out and measure it. Which, > thanks to bernoulli's law will actually measure colder air than is in > the cylinder (air cools down when it expands), which in turn by boyle > will shrink the air (colder air is denser).
You can do an isothermal expansion of air, or let the captured air warm back up to ambient temperature. Not that I expect people do it. But if they did, that would be a 3000 psi / 1 atm = 204.13x expansion in volume 11.1 L * 204.13 = 2265,9 L = 80.02 ft³ This is including the 11.1L of air at 1 atm that was left inside the bottle. -- Thiago Macieira - thiago (AT) macieira.info - thiago (AT) kde.org Software Architect - Intel Open Source Technology Center _______________________________________________ subsurface mailing list subsurface@subsurface-divelog.org http://lists.subsurface-divelog.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/subsurface