it would change the pressure exerted by the gas in the container.
No, if the gas is in a rigid container how would the volume increase? The pressure would increase with rises in temperature.
Pressure rises.
its pressure
Increasing the temperature of a gas will increase it's pressure ONLY if the volume is held constant.
False. Gases in a container take the shape of the container. The volume of a gas increases with temperature and inversely with pressure, except when in a closed container where volume remains the same as the volume of the container and the temperature and pressure will vary.
In a small volume container the pressure is higher.
In terms of gases, a fixed volume would mean that the pressure, temperature and the number of molecules can change but the volume, or area in which the molecules lie, must remain constant
Rigid container implies the volume stays constant. The pressure will increase, and if the container is well insulated, the temperature may also increase.
Increasing the temperature of a gas will increase it's pressure ONLY if the volume is held constant.
It does not because change only occurs when temperature is involved.
Charles's Law
False. Gases in a container take the shape of the container. The volume of a gas increases with temperature and inversely with pressure, except when in a closed container where volume remains the same as the volume of the container and the temperature and pressure will vary.
In a small volume container the pressure is higher.
In terms of gases, a fixed volume would mean that the pressure, temperature and the number of molecules can change but the volume, or area in which the molecules lie, must remain constant
Yes, the volume of any gas can shrink or expand to fit into its container. If you want to increase the volume of a gas, you can decrease pressure and/or increase the temperature of the gas.
Orange juice does not change volume when it is poured into a different container. Volume will change if the juice undergoes a process such as concentration.
Rigid container implies the volume stays constant. The pressure will increase, and if the container is well insulated, the temperature may also increase.
Yes because the amount of liquid is still the same, nothing is added or taken away If the temperature and pressure are unchanged then the volume of the liquid is unchanged regardless of the container it is in.
does gas take the shape of it's container and can change volume
With gasses, it's a three-way balance between pressure, temperature and volume. If you change one, you affect the other. When you release gas from a container, the the pressure and the temperature drops.