The volume of a gas will decrease.
Let's think of some good examples. How about an air tank? Its volume is very small but the gas it contains could easily fill a small room. How is the volume so small, then? Because the gas is under extremely high pressure.
Okay so intuition from every day life tells us increase in pressure means decrease in volume.
Examples of temperature? A hot air balloon is filled by a flame that heats the gas inside it. The balloon gets bigger - the volume rises. This is an especially relevant example since the hot air balloon rises due to buoyancy, meaning the air inside it is less dense than the air outside it.
Less dense means there is less mass per volume inside it, so again we know that the gas inside the balloon has undergone an increase in volume in response to being heated.
So increase of temperature means an increase of volume.
The answer to your question, then, is that the volume will decrease (which is actually kinda difficult to do sometimes...but still a theoretical fact).
For further reading and understanding, see "Ideal gas law".
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.
more solutes = less osmotic pressure = decreased turgor pressure
if the temperature increased, then the radish germination will increase
pure water (with no impurities added ) can only boil at 100 degrees Celsius , no other temperature . But if we add impurities to it than the temperature at which the water will boil can increase or decrease. Another point is that when we increase or decrease the atmospheric pressure, the temperature at which ordinary water boils (i.e.100 degrees Celsius) can also increase or decrease.
The flow rate of the water determines the cooling load. As you increase and decrease the flow, the load is being increased and decreased. The system is designed to be most efficient at a certain specific load, and it is at that point that the COP will be at it's maximum. Any flow rate above and below that point will decrease the COP.
it has increased more that it decreased
There will be an overall increase in the first number.
Pressure can be increased by adding more force or reducing the area over which the force is applied. It can be decreased by reducing the force or increasing the area over which the force is distributed. Additionally, changing the volume of a container can also affect pressure, as pressure is inversely proportional to volume for a fixed amount of gas.
would molarity increase, decrease, or stay the same if the room temperature increased by 5 degrees centigrade
Increase source temperature or decrease sink temperature.More efficient way is to decrease sink temperature.
If the size of the piston is increased, the power will increase. If it is decreased, the power will decrease.
decrease
A change in volume with a constant, unchanging Pressure and Temperature results in increased or decreased density, inversely dependent on increase or decrease in volume.
% change is the % of increase or % of decrease. % change = (difference of the two values / the original value) x 100% =[(original value - new value)/original value] x 100% % increase -if the value increased % decrease -if the value decreased
pressure is directly propotional to temperature, so if the pressure is increased then the temperature will also increase and vice-versa.
Although it is not stated in the question the x-axis would probably consist of temperature (in a given area) and the y-axis would consist of precipitation (in a given area). The precipitation would increase or decrease as the temperature increased or decreased.
The final result is 10.4% more than the original number.