One variable always decreases as the other decreases. One variable always increases as the other increases.
The temperature of water and the solubility of a gas are in an inverse relationship; gases are more soluble at low temperatures.
HCl is formed
pressure. simple answer is pressure. what happens is that as the gas gets hotter they move move and want more volume, if you don't allow them that volume the pressure goes up. when you get a gas colder, the opposite happens and makes the pressure go down.
The boron hydride (also called diborane, B2H6) is not obtained by the direct reaction of hydrogen and boron; other methods are used.
Boyle's Law is the inverse relationship of pressure and volume with temperature remaining constant. Charles' Law is the direct relationship of temperature and volume with pressure remaining constant. Gay-Lussac's Law is the direct relationshipof pressure and temperature with volume remaining constant. The Combined Gas Law relates all three - volume, pressure, and temperature.
it is a direct relationship -eli martin
Direct Proportion
type the equation that shows the relationship between the variables in this chart.
they all have a direct relationship so one of the variables would have to change to effect the other
It is a direct proportion.
it is a direct relationship -eli martin
If two variables are in direct relationship then the ratio of the two variables is known as the constant of proportion between them. In algebraic form, if X and Y are the two variables, then direct proportionality implies that Y = cX and c is the constant of proportionality.
if it passes through (0,0) then it is a direct variation
YES...A direct variation is a linear relationship in which y-intercept is always 0.
Yes, it does. Every time there are variables in direct or inverse relationship, there is a constant of proportionality.
A direct correlation, it appears as a straight line on a graph and occurs when variables are related as y=xk.
No. Direct variation describes a relationship between two variables. It has nothing to do with the value of a single number.