You flick its volume switch and ask it to increase, then it does it for you, but only for a little white, other wise the air will feel sick!!
No. If the temperature of a gas increases at least one of the other two values must increase as well.
Primarily in two ways. If the volume is decreased, the pressure will increase. Also, if the temperature increases at a constant volume, then the pressure will increase.
The volume of hydrogen gas compares to the volume of oxygen gas based on their stoichiometric ratio in chemical reactions, particularly in the formation of water. In the reaction 2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O, two volumes of hydrogen gas react with one volume of oxygen gas. This means that for every two volumes of hydrogen, there is one volume of oxygen. Therefore, the volume of hydrogen gas is twice that of oxygen gas in this specific reaction.
There are four factors that affect gas pressure. The ideal gas law enumerates them: Pressure = number of gas molecules * constant describing the particular gas's behavior * temperature of the gas / volume in which the gas is confined
Gas pressure is affected by factors such as temperature, volume, and the number of gas particles present. For instance, increasing the temperature of a gas will increase its pressure, while decreasing the volume of a gas will increase its pressure as well. Additionally, having more gas particles in a given space will lead to higher pressure.
gases obey the universal gas law of (gas pressure) * (gas volume) / (gas temperature) being a constant. If the pressure is kept unchanged before and after the heating occurs, doubling the temperature will increase the volume to two times the volume before.
PV = nRT or (Pressure) = (moles of gas)x(universal gas constant)x(Temperature)/(Volume). Thus to increase pressure: increase the amount of the gas, increase the temperature of the gas or decrease the volume of the container in which it is held.
The pressure is now higher.
No. The pressure can increase at constant volume or even decreasing volume. The pressure, volume, temperature and amount of gas in a container are all linked. This is expressed using the Ideal Gas Law, which says that PV = nRT. In this equation, P is the pressure, V is the volume, n is the amount of gas (in moles), R is a constant, and T is the temperature (in Kelvin). What the Ideal Gas Law says is that if the pressure goes up, something else much change, but it could be either the volume, the temperature, or the amount of gas. Let me give a few examples. Imagine some gas inside a piston. If you compress the piston, the volume will decrease, and the pressure will increase correspondingly. Now imagine a solid container (like an oxygen tank for scuba diving for instance). If it is empty and you start filling it with gas, the pressure will increase. In this case the volume is constant, but the amount of gas is increasing ("n" in the PV = nRT equation). Same idea when you pump up your car or bike tires -- the volume changes more than with a metal container, but not much really. For more information, see the links to the left of this answer.
The volume of gas depends on two things: pressure and temperature.
From the Universal Gas Law: PV/T = a constant, where P = gas pressure, V = gas volume, and T = gas temperature. I would say the two factors that determine volume are pressure and temperature.
The two main factors that affect density are the mass of an object and its volume. An increase in mass or a decrease in volume will lead to an increase in density, whereas a decrease in mass or an increase in volume will result in a decrease in density.