Want this question answered?
no
As the temperature of a gas increases, so does the volume.
Density is mass/volume. So for a given mass as the volume increases the density will reduce.
yes
the higher the temperature, the higher the volume of a solid - michelle strafer
well, you see, if the volume is higher, the design will be more awesome, and so on, and so forth.
It deals with low-volume, high variety production ("job shop", intermittent production). The design places departments with large flows of material or people together. Department areas having similar processes located in close proximity e.g. All x-ray machines in same area. Its used in process-focused processes.
volume does affect the density because the formula of density= mass/ volume
the size of its head
Compressing a gas means increasing the pressure on the gas and according to Boyle's law pressure is inversely proportional to the volume of a given amount of a gas(at constant temperature) . Therefore increasing the pressure (compression) of the gas reduces the volume of the gas.
If the temperature remains constant, decreasing the volume will increase the pressure.
Volume is a measure of how much space something takes up. Temperature and pressure affect volume.
Doubling the radius quadruples the volume.
High temperature makes the volume greater.
The volume decreases (smaller,less)
Lowers stroke volume
The Sony MP3 player offers a variety of features. In addition to a compact design, it also offers FM radio recording, lyrics display, volume limiter and built in games.