Are you talking about gases? I think there is a mistake in the question you are asking.
Temperature and pressure
temperature, pressure, presence of other chemical species (for the same solute and the same solvent)
This depends on the temperature.
A phase diagram shows if a substance is going to be a solid gas, or liquid at a combination of pressure and temperature. It states what phase of matter a substance is at a specific temperature.
The critical pressure of a substance is the pressure required to liquefy a gas at its critical temperature. Some examples are shown below.
The temperature and pressure of the atmosphere must be at that point or in an interval of values for the substance to be saturated. When mixing solutions, the temperature and pressure must be within a certain range for the substance to dissolve.
pasterisation
"A phase diagram is a graph of pressure versus temperature that shows in which phase a substance exists under different condition of temperature and pressure" -Glencoe Chemistry Book
Phase Diagram
Temperature and pressure
Temperature and pressure
The type of substance; the substance outside this substance, the pressure, the temperature.
Solubility of a solute is the amount of this substance dissolved in a given solvent, at a given temperature and pressure; the solubility is expressed in g/L or g/100 mL.
Temperature and pressure
temperature, pressure, presence of other chemical species (for the same solute and the same solvent)
Temperature and Pressure
Temperature and pressure.