V/T = constant
The volume is directly proportional to temperature at constant pressure.
You might use the Boyle's Law and Charles' Law when you are dealing with a kinetic theory question.
The ideal gas law, PV=nRT, combines Boyle's Law (P1V1 = P2V2), Charles's Law (V1/T1 = V2/T2), and relates the pressure and temperature of a gas when the volume is held constant.
The equation PV = nRT is derived from the ideal gas law, which incorporates principles from both Charles's Law and Boyle's Law. Boyle's Law states that pressure and volume are inversely related at constant temperature, while Charles's Law states that volume and temperature are directly related at constant pressure. Therefore, PV relates to Boyle's Law when temperature is constant, and it relates to Charles's Law when pressure is constant.
Charles' Law relates absolute temperature and volume for fixed mass or moles of gas atconstant pressure. Charle's Law may be written as :V/T = Constant .........or........ as T/V = Constant
V/t=constant
V/t=constant
V/T = k
V/T = k
Charles's law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature, assuming constant pressure. Mathematically, this can be expressed as V1/T1 = V2/T2, where V is volume and T is temperature.
V/t
V/t=p
V/T=k
PV = constant (apex)
The formula is: V = k.T where:- k is a constant- V is the volume- T is the temperatureThe Charles law is valid at constant temperature.
The volume is directly proportional to temperature at constant pressure.
Charles W. Collier has written: 'Wealth in Families' 'Meaning in law' -- subject(s): Philosophy, Freedom of expression, Law, Semantics (Law)