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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.
Yes, though it is slight, the volume increase is measurable when the temperature of salt water increases.
The volume of water increase under 3,98 oC.
the density of water at 40 degrees C is 0.992g/mL. What is the volume of 2.27g of water at this temperature?
The mass = its volume. This is true if the mass of water is measured in grams and the volume is measured in cc and the density of water is 1 gram/cc. Depending on temperature, 1 gram/cc is a good approximation. In general, the relationship between water (or anything else) and its volume is mass/volume = density.
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.
Substances such as water or air have a temperature; volume does not in itself have a temperature, although something that is inside a specific volume can have a temperature.
Density = mass/volume so it is related to mass and volume. And Volume is related to temperature and pressure, so it is related to those as well.
They're proportional; as temperature increases volume increases.
They're proportional; as temperature increases volume increases.
yeah the temperature does increase, when you increase the volume of water the temperature of calcium hydroxide increases too!
Yes, though it is slight, the volume increase is measurable when the temperature of salt water increases.
For a given volume and pressure, the mass of the air contained in that volume (density) will decrease as the temperature increases.
Temperature is not related to any of those quantities, so it can be any temperature.
No, it does not. The volume of water changes according with it's temperature. Water, unlike other substances, it has a minimum volume at 4 degrees Celsius.
The water becomes 100 degrees and is warm to the touch.