When temperature increases, pressure also increases.
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Density of a liquid is indirectly proportional to the temperature. When the temperature raises, the density of the liquid decreases. Therefor the temperature has an effect on water density.
Leaving aside the obvious deficiencies in the question (1.2 WHAT? What substance?)... For most substances pressure has only a tiny effect on the melting point, and enormous pressures are required to change the melting point significantly (in contrast to boiling point, where pressure has a relatively much greater effect).
Joule-Thomson effectAlso known as the Joule-Kelvin effect. When a Gas expands through a porous plug, a change of temperature occurs, proportional to the pressure difference across the plug. The temperature change is due to a departure of the gas from Joule's Law, the gas performing internal work in overcoming the mutual attractions of the Molecules and thus cooling itself; and partly to deviation of the gas from Boyles law. The latter effect can give rise to either to cooling or heating, depending upon the initial temperature and pressure difference used. For a given mean pressure, the temperature at which the two effects balance, resulting in no alteration of temperature, is called the inversion temperature. Gases expanding through a porous plug below their inversion temperature are cooled, otherwise they are heated.
A large temperature change .....like if it was very cold would make the air compress and shrinks so the air pressure would go up you should explain what you think happens because it is really complicated and because barometers aren't always right because of the temperature but then again sometimes it might not matter.
Universal Gas Law: P*V/T = a constant, where P = gas pressure [Pa], V = volume [m3], and T = gas temperature [K]. Therefore, when the gas temperature increases, the pressure increases linearly with it, when the volume is constant.
Temperature is not directly tied to volume, its related to pressure. Increasing the temperature will increase the pressure--only if volume is held constant. That is were volume and temperature are related, through pressure. However, if you increase the volume it does not change the temperature.
Temperature is not directly tied to volume, its related to pressure. Increasing the temperature will increase the pressure--only if volume is held constant. That is were volume and temperature are related, through pressure. However, if you increase the volume it does not change the temperature.
Latent heat of water is the heat required to change its state at a particular temperature BECAUSE of the pressure at which the water is at at the point of fusion or evaporation.The latent heat is not affected by temperature (in fact there is no temperature change during absorption of latent heat) it is affected by the pressure acting on a substance. As the pressure increases, the latent heat (of evaporation) decreases, consequently with the change in pressure there is also a different temperature at which the evaporation takes effect, higher pressure, higher temperature at the evaporation point.
Temperature, pressure, and common ion effect
i can effect the pressure and make gripping difficult
temperature and pressure
temperature humidity and elevation
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.
Yes, temperature have generally an important effect.
temperature, pressure. flow
..change it ..change it
When temperature is increased the amount of molecules evaporated is increasef and as a consequence condensation is also increased so vapour pressure increases.