Imagine you have a small box inside a larger box, the temperatures are the same. If the smaller box contains high pressure gas, and you want to lower the pressure, you open the box. The same amount of gas has now diffused into the larger box. So I guess the answer to your question is that the gas will diffuse.
If the pressure on a gas increases, its volume would generally decrease, provided that the temperature remains constant. This relationship is described by Boyle's Law, which states that pressure and volume are inversely proportional when temperature is held constant.
Gas pressure and volume vary inversely with each other, according to Boyle's Law. This means that as the pressure of a gas increases, its volume decreases, and vice versa, as long as the temperature remains constant.
.. thenEITHER the pressure is halved for the same amount (moles) of gas,ORthe amount (moles) of gas is doubled at the same pressure,ORany valid combination of these possibillities.
Charles' Law shows the direct relationship between Temperature and Volume. It states that V1/T1= V2/T2. The temperature must be in Kelvin! The pressure and #of moles must be constant!
Yes. Since pressure and volume are inversely related, volume decreases when pressure increases (as long as temperature is constant). Consider the equation: PV=nRT, where n = moles, T is in degrees Kelvin, and R is the gas constant 0.082. Do the algebra and see how: P=nRT/V and the inverses become more easily understood.
To determine the density of a substance when given its pressure and temperature, you can use the ideal gas law equation, which is density (pressure molar mass) / (gas constant temperature). This formula allows you to calculate the density of the substance based on the provided pressure and temperature values.
Charles' Law: V1/T1 = V2/T2 The number of moles and the pressure are constant.
Temperature and the amount of gas (moles) must be kept constant for Boyle's law to hold true. This means the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely proportional provided the temperature and amount of gas remain constant.
Charles's Law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature (in Kelvin) when pressure is held constant. Mathematically, it can be expressed as ( V = kT ), where ( V ) is the volume, ( T ) is the absolute temperature, and ( k ) is a constant that depends on the amount of gas and the pressure. This relationship indicates that as the temperature increases, the volume of the gas also increases, provided the pressure remains unchanged.
Charles's law states that the volume of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature, provided that pressure and amount of gas remain constant.
Raising the temperature of a gas will increase its pressure, following the ideal gas law (PV = nRT). As temperature increases, the average kinetic energy of the gas particles also increases, leading to more frequent and forceful collisions with the walls of the container, resulting in higher pressure.
Sorry, the atmospheric pressure has really nothing to do with the speed of sound at 0c, but he temperature is very important Scroll down to related links and read the short article "Speed of sound - temperature matters, not air pressure". The air pressure and the air density are proportional to each other at the same temperature.
because according to kinetic theory number of collisions exert force per unit area(pressure) so when the temperature is constant along with volume then the same number of collisions are taking place per unit time thats why pressure remains constant....
graham's law of diffusion states that the rate of diffusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its density provided the temperature and pressure remain constant
If the pressure on a gas increases, its volume would generally decrease, provided that the temperature remains constant. This relationship is described by Boyle's Law, which states that pressure and volume are inversely proportional when temperature is held constant.
Gas pressure and volume vary inversely with each other, according to Boyle's Law. This means that as the pressure of a gas increases, its volume decreases, and vice versa, as long as the temperature remains constant.
This is consequence of a very common law which is known as Boyle's law.According to it when we give pressure to the gas at constant temperature the volume of gas decreases.The gas law formula is: pV/T=k; the volume is decreasing.