Gases obey Charles' Law, so T1V2 = T2V1: that is, as temperature increases, so does volume, as temperature decreases, so does volume... so long as the pressure is adjusted or allowed to be constant.
For more, check out Charles' Law.
As the temperature of a gas increases, so does the volume.
Generally speaking - if you lower the temperature of a gas, it becomes more dense. If the temperature is lowered sufficiently it will start to condense into a liquid.
amount of gas, temperature, and volume.Further answerI would add pressure to that.
Increased density and temperature.
the higher the temperature, the higher the volume of a solid - michelle strafer
As the temperature of a gas increases, so does the volume.
yes
Increasing the temperature of a solvent decreases the solubility of a gas Generally, increasing solvent temperature decreases the solubility of gases.
There are two factors that affect gas pressure. These factors are temperature and volume. Higher volume means lower pressure. Higher temperature means higher pressure.
Heat expands the gas (any gas) and makes the balloon rise.
heat makes gas expand and cold makes gas liquify
It affects pressure, not volume.
Boyle temperature
Generally speaking - if you lower the temperature of a gas, it becomes more dense. If the temperature is lowered sufficiently it will start to condense into a liquid.
the amount of energy applied does not affect the temperature until the gas begins to form completely
amount of gas, temperature, and volume.Further answerI would add pressure to that.
No, it does affect the volume of a gas according to the ideal gas law (PV=nRT).