boyle??? not sure though
Volume & pressure are inversely proportionate, if temperature stays constant volume would decrease at a factor proporionate to the increase in pressure.
Gases Boyle's law states that the Volume of a given amount of gas at constant Temperature varies inversely proportional to Pressure. You have a given volume of gas, and you double its pressure keeping Temperature constant, the volume will reduce by half.
Boyle found that when the pressure of a gas at constant temperature is increased the volume of a gas decreases. P x V is a constant at constant Temperature Boyle's Law: P1V1 = P2V2
At a constant temperature, the volume and the pressure are inversely proportional, that it, the greater the volume, the lesser the pressure on the gas, and viceversa.
Pressure. This means that as pressure increases, volume decreases, and vice versa, as long as temperature remains constant.
It can but, not necessarily so. At a constant volume the temperature and pressure rise in direct proportion. At a constant temperature the volume is inversely proportionate to the pressure. At a constant pressure the volume is directly proportionate to the temperature.
At a constant temperature, the volume and the pressure are inversely proportional, that it, the greater the volume, the lesser the pressure on the gas, and viceversa.
Boyle's law states that the volume of a gas is inversely proportional to its pressure if the temperature remains constant.
At constant temperature, the product of pressure and volume is a constant, or pressure is inversely proportional to volume, is known as Boyle's Law.
Robert Boyle's Law: At constant temperature, the volume of a gas varies inversely with its pressure.
Pressure will decrease with (because it is inversely proportianal to) volume, if (and only if!) temperature is held constant.
direct proportionality because then the pressure of the gas is constant. Gay Lussac's law clearly states that the volume of an enclosed gas is directly proportional to the absolute temperature of the gas, provided that the pressure remains constant.