The density increases. A lot for well-compressible substances such as gases, a little for hardly-compressible substances such as water.
The density of a material depends on the mass and the volume of that material. In order to find the density of a material you must multiple the mass of the material and the volume of the material.
It would be half of the original volume. As you reduce the volume the pressure would increase and at half the original volume the pressure would be doubled.
Pressure increases as volume increases, granted the container stays the same.
Pressure will decrease with (because it is inversely proportianal to) volume, if (and only if!) temperature is held constant.
if kelvin temp is halved, the volume is halved if pressure is constant.
When pressure increases the volume of the material decreases. Density=mass/volume When volume decreases density increases.(Mass constant)
The volume is halved
the volume doubles
the volume doubles
Volume decrease.
The pressure will increase.
It depends on the material. Most materials would expand and the volume would increases.
Volume increases
The volume increases.
The density of a material depends on the mass and the volume of that material. In order to find the density of a material you must multiple the mass of the material and the volume of the material.
Liquid.
It would be half of the original volume. As you reduce the volume the pressure would increase and at half the original volume the pressure would be doubled.