The volume of a specified gas at a specified temperature and pressure may be found using the Ideal Gas Law:
V = ( n ) ( R ) ( T ) / ( P ) = ( m /M ) ( R ) ( T )
where V = volume
n = moles
R = universal gas constant
T = absolute temperature
P = absolute pressure
m = mass
M = molecular weight.
The density of a substance is determined by its mass and volume. It is calculated by dividing the mass of the substance by its volume. The formula for density is: Density Mass / Volume.
The density of a substance is determined by its mass and volume. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the substance by its volume. The denser a substance is, the more mass it has in a given volume.
Density = Mass/volume Therefore the quantities are mass (g) and volume (cm3)
A gas's volume is determined by the amount of space it occupies. The volume of a gas can be influenced by factors such as temperature, pressure, and the quantity of gas present. According to the ideal gas law, volume is inversely proportional to pressure and directly proportional to temperature and quantity of gas.
Liquids have a definite volume and take the shape of their container, while gases have neither a definite volume nor shape, filling the entire space available to them. Gases are compressible, while liquids are not. Additionally, gases exhibit lower intermolecular forces compared to liquids.
The Universal Gas constant can be used to relate the volume, temperature, pressure, and quantity of a gass to each other. The relationship is PV=nRT, or the pressure times the volume equals the number of moles times the universal gass constant times the temperature.
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Liters
the container that it is in
The amplitude of a sound wave.
Supervisor
volume.
mass= density times volume
Volume.
Density is mass divided by volume.
Volume (loudness)
The density of the substance.