As the gas gets hotter the molecules move faster, taking up more area.
Yes, usually. An important exception is water, between 0 and 4 degrees (that is, just above its freezing point).
Yes, usually. An important exception is water, between 0 and 4 degrees (that is, just above its freezing point).
Yes, usually. An important exception is water, between 0 and 4 degrees (that is, just above its freezing point).
Yes, usually. An important exception is water, between 0 and 4 degrees (that is, just above its freezing point).
The volume and pressure either decrease or increase.
Check out BOYLE'S LAW otherwise known as MARIOTTE'S LAW
Usually, yes. There are some exceptions, like water between 0 and 4 degrees Celsius (that is, just above the freezing point).
It increases also, they are directly related/ proportional.
Additional answer
But not if you are considering solids. The question does not make this clear.
According to the Ideal gas law,
pV=nRT
where p = absolute pressure and T = absolute temperature
Therefore, the temperature increases if the pressure increases.
When temperature increases, volume of gases increases, according to Charles's law.
The pressure will increase if the volume remains the same.
Yes, usually. An important exception is water, between 0 and 4 degrees (that is, just above its freezing point).
if volume of a gas increases temperature also increases
Yes, though it is slight, the volume increase is measurable when the temperature of salt water increases.
at constant temperature in a closedcontainer the increase in temperature increases the volume of a gas but not the mass.
If density = mass/volume, and your volume increases while mass remains the same... Then the denominator increases which would decrease the density
As temperature increases, so does molecular velocity, which also means volume increases.
if volume of a gas increases temperature also increases
Yes, though it is slight, the volume increase is measurable when the temperature of salt water increases.
The liquid vaporizes and the temperature increases as the volume also increases.
The volume will increase in proportion to the increase in absolute temperature.
The volume of a gas must increase when the temperature of the gas increases.
yeah the temperature does increase, when you increase the volume of water the temperature of calcium hydroxide increases too!
at constant temperature in a closedcontainer the increase in temperature increases the volume of a gas but not the mass.
If density = mass/volume, and your volume increases while mass remains the same... Then the denominator increases which would decrease the density
Volume increases with increase in temperature, and decreases with decrease in temperature.
- a decrease in volume- the increase of temperature
expansion
Assuming that pressure and the amount of matter are constant (meaning they do not change), volume will increase as temperature increases.