Boyle, Gay-Lussac & Charles, combined Robert Boyle (Irish, 1662) Edme Mariotte (French, 1676) These 2 guys invited this general idea for gas in about the same time. Gay-Lussac-Charles (1787): pV=const.(in the perfect gas). This guy calculated that volume of gas adequately increases, when pressure decreases. And other way round. However, this theory does not work for in real enviromnent.
Boyles Law refers to the way gas and pressure interact. It says that the pressure of a gas times the volume of the gas will equal a constant. The constant is supposed to represent an "ideal gas."
Robert Boyle
Temperature increases as pressure increases.
When the temperature of a gas is increased at a constant pressure, its volume increases. When the temperature of a gas is devreased at constnt pressure, its volume decreases.
With the ideal gas law PV=nRT, if n (number of molecules, R(gas constant) and T (temperature) are fixed, then the product of P (pressure) and V (volume) is also constant. So. Pressure and Volume are inversely related. If pressure goes up, volume must go down and if pressure goes down, volume must increase. The same goes with increasing or decreasing volume.
decreases
The volume decreases
Decreases.
Volume decreases when gas pressure increases, according to Boyle's law. This law states that the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume under constant temperature.
Boyle's Law states that at constant temperature, the volume of a gas is inversely proportional to its pressure. This means that as the pressure of a gas increases, its volume decreases, and vice versa.
This is known as Boyle's Law, which states that the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume when temperature is kept constant. This means that as the volume decreases, the pressure increases, and vice versa.
This is Boyle's Law, which states that at constant temperature, the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely proportional. Thus, when pressure increases, volume decreases.
When the temperature of a gas is increased at a constant pressure, its volume increases. When the temperature of a gas is devreased at constnt pressure, its volume decreases.
This one is explained in Boyle's Law. It was stated that if the temperature is constant, the pressure is inversely proportional to the volume. Thus, if the pressure increases, the volume decreases. It is also the same as if the pressure decreases, the volume of the gas increases.
The pressure of a gas in a container increases when the volume decreases, and decreases when the volume increases, following Boyle's Law. Additionally, the pressure of a gas increases with an increase in temperature, as per Gay-Lussac's Law.
If you increase the volume of the container, and not the gas itself, then the pressure decreases. If you increase the volume of the gas, and not the container, then the pressure increases.
"When the pressure of a gas at constant temperature is increased, the volume of the gas decreases. When the pressure is decreased, the volume increases." More precisely, pressure is inversely proportional to volume.