I think you are talking about car tires. It is NOT a good approximation because Boyle's law states that the temperature and the amount of gas must be constant. If you are pumping in more (air)gas, then the amount of gas is not constant. If the tire is setting in the hot sun the temperature is not constant.
Boyles Law
saya tak tahu
Robert Boyles ...Boyles law which states the principle that at a constant temperature the volume of a confined ideal gas varies inversley with its pressure.
Pressure x Volume = Constant (at a constant temperature).
Temperature remain constant.
Boyles Law
When you pop a balloon by overfilling it with air, you are applying Boyles Law. When a nurse fills a syringe before she gives you a shot, she is working with Boyles Law. Sport and commercial diving. Underwater salvage operations rely on Boyles Law to calculate weights from bottom to surface. When your ears pop on a plane as it rises from takeoff, that's Boyles Law in action.
They are both gas laws?
Boyles law refers to an experimental law involving gas and its pressure, used to measure the volume of that gas. It ultimately measures the pressure and volume of that gas.
Boyle's Law is the inverse relationship between pressure and volume.
Boyles Law
Liquid The Boyle law is for gases !!
Boyle's Law is an indirect relationship. (Or an inverse)
he invented the formulation of "BOYLE'S LAW"
yes im not sure why, but yea
boyle's law.
Boyles Law deals with conditions of constant temperature. Charles' Law deals with conditions of constant pressure. From the ideal gas law of PV = nRT, when temperature is constant (Boyles Law), this can be rearranged to P1V1 = P2V2 (assuming constant number of moles of gas). When pressure is constant, it can be rearranged to V1/T1 = V2/T2 (assuming constant number of moles of gas).