Ideal gas law.
At a fixed temperature, the pressure and volume are inversely related.
PV=mRT
heat and volume
It affects pressure, not volume.
There are two factors that affect gas pressure. These factors are temperature and volume. Higher volume means lower pressure. Higher temperature means higher pressure.
The relationship between pressure and volume (apex)
The ideal gas law describes the relationship between volume, pressure, and temperature of a gas. When a balloon is taken to a mountaintop, where the atmospheric pressure is lower, the volume of the balloon increases because the pressure on the balloon decreases. This change in volume is in accordance with Boyle's law, a special case of the ideal gas law.
Boyle's Law describes the relationship between the pressure and volume of a gas at constant temperature. According to Boyle's Law, when adding gas to a balloon, the volume will decrease if the pressure inside the balloon increases.
Charles's Law describes the relationship between volume and temperature of a gas when pressure is constant. It states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature when pressure is held constant.
Volume
Tonicity
Boyle's law describes the behavior of gasses, specifically the relationship between the pressure of a gas and its volume, such that in a closed system, as the pressure of a gas increases, its volume decreases.
The gas law that describes the inverse relationship between pressure and volume is Boyle's Law. It states that at constant temperature, the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume. In other words, as pressure increases, volume decreases, and vice versa.
Boyle's Law describes the relationship between volume and pressure in a gas at constant temperature. It states that as the volume of a gas increases, the pressure decreases, and vice versa, when temperature remains constant.