I would guess that the first careful measurements that are ever referenced were performed by Jacques Charles. In 1787 he did an experiment where he filled 5 balloons with with equal volumes of oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and air and he heated them all to 80oC. He noticed that all five balloons increased in volume by the exact same amount, but never published his results. Charles' law (which describes the relationship between the volume of a gas and its temperature) was actually developed by Guy-Lussac, but named after Charles because of this initial unpublished experiment.
It could also be Boyle.
Robert Boyle
see link
Robert Boyle! He was a chemist and an "Alchemist".
Jaques Charles
Mister Robert Boyle, in 1662.
Boyle
Boyle
According to Charles law,the given volume is directly proportional to the absolute temperature at constant pressure and number of moles. "Asad Jamal" HAMDARD UNIVERSITY Karachi,Pakistan.
The pressure and volume are related because both are variable of indefinite which means that both are not positive or definite and they tend to vary by the object they are in.
High temperature makes the volume greater.
Temperature increases as pressure increases.
volume
the relationship of gas volume and gas temperature is found in charels law
As the temperature increases, so does the volume.
The relationship between temperature and volume
The relationship between temperature and volume
The volume of gases decreases with temperature; extrapolating the volume/temperature relationship, it looked as if all gases would reach a volume of zero at approximately the same temperature, about minus 273 degrees centigrade.
A graph of Charles' Law shows the relationship between Volume vs. Temperature. Volume is placed on the y axis and temperature on the x axis. The relationship is linear if temperature is in units of Kelvin.
In Charles' Law, the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature, if pressure and amount of gas are held constant. As the temperature of a gas increases, its volume expands and vice versa. This relationship was observed by French scientist Jacques Charles in the late 18th century.
Volume = a constant times T (in Kelvin)
This graph of Charles Law would show the relationship of volume of a gas as a function of the temperature at constant pressure.
they have an intimate relationship
directly proportional
The relationship between temperature and volume