Yes, it is directly proportional to temperature because according to Gernal Gas Equation
"PV=nRT"
So, at constant volume and for particular number moles it can be seen that pressure is directly proportional to temperature.
yes temperature is directly proprtional to pressure
The atm and boiling point is like when the waha the
Yes, temperature is nearly an exact function of the logarithm of pressure.
According to my hippo named smalls it is neither and that question has nothing to do with his beautiful teeth or fluffy nose so he does not care
if pressure increases temperature increases
if pressure decreases temperature decrease
the motion particles studyisland
Yes
Sorry, the atmospheric pressure has really nothing to do with the speed of sound at 0c, but he temperature is very important Scroll down to related links and read the short article "Speed of sound - temperature matters, not air pressure". The air pressure and the air density are proportional to each other at the same temperature.
The velocity of sound in air is independent of change of the atmospheric pressure, but is really dependent on the temperature.
When a parcel of air is forced downward, atmospheric pressure increases, causing the air to become compressed and therefore the temperature is also raised.
when temperature of air increases it becomes less dense and expands rising up which causes the pressure to drop
It results in a lower atmospheric pressure.
Gravity. Atmospheric pressure is the weight of a column of air. Of course, the temperature of that air changes it's density and therefore it's weight (i.e. pressure)
The atmospheric pressure has no effect on the speed of sound when the temperature is constant. The air pressure has no influence on the sound.
In weather maps, atmospheric pressure is measured in millibars. Standard atmospheric pressure is 1013.2 millibars at sea level. Air pressure varies depending on temperature and air density.
The speed of sound in air changes clearly with temperature, a little bit with humidity − but not with air pressure (atmospheric pressure).
Sorry, the atmospheric pressure has really nothing to do with the speed of sound at 0c, but he temperature is very important Scroll down to related links and read the short article "Speed of sound - temperature matters, not air pressure". The air pressure and the air density are proportional to each other at the same temperature.
No. The speed of sound in air changes clearly with temperature, a little bit with humidity − but not with air pressure (atmospheric pressure).
Air Pressure The force exerted by the air above is called?
A Barometer primarily measures atmospheric pressure, although atmospheric pressure is affected by air temperature. http://www.answers.com/topic/barometer http://www.answers.com/topic/atmospheric-pressure?method=26&initiator=WANS
Pressure.
Atmospheric humidity is defined as the amount of pressure of water vapor in an air to water mixture. This will be influenced by the temperature at a given time.
temperature, pressure, volume, and density temperature, pressure, volume, and density
The speed of sound does not change with atmospheric pressure. The speed of sound changes with temperature.