Decreasing the pressure applied to the gas (apex)
The volume of a gas must increase when the temperature of the gas increases.
According to the combined gas law, volume and pressure are indirectly related. Therefore, if the pressure of a gas increases, the volume will decrease.
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Increasing the temperature of a gas will increase it's pressure ONLY if the volume is held constant.
decrease
decreasing the volume available for the gas or increasing its temperature
To increase the volume of a gas * reduce the pressure, or * increase the temperature, or * add more gas
The volume increase when the amount of gas increase.
The volume of a gas must increase when the temperature of the gas increases.
If you increase the volume of the container, and not the gas itself, then the pressure decreases. If you increase the volume of the gas, and not the container, then the pressure increases.
If possible, the gas will increase in volume. If it is unable to increase in volume for some reason, it will increase in pressure.
Any of the following: increasing the amount of gas; increasing the temperature; reducing the volume.
more gas If you increase the volume without adding more gas, the pressure decreases.
This is the Gay-Lussac law: at constant volume of a gas the temperature increase when the pressure increase.
Yes, the volume of any gas can shrink or expand to fit into its container. If you want to increase the volume of a gas, you can decrease pressure and/or increase the temperature of the gas.
According to the combined gas law, volume and pressure are indirectly related. Therefore, if the pressure of a gas increases, the volume will decrease.
As indicated by the Ideal Gas Laws, increasing temperature will tend to increase both volume and pressure. Of course, volume can't always increase, that depends upon the flexibility or inflexibility of the container that the gas is in, and if the volume does increase that will counteract the increase in pressure that would otherwise have happened. Temperature, pressure, and volume are all interconnected in a gas.