Temperature does not depend on the size or volume of an object; it is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles within that object. Two objects of different sizes can have the same temperature if their particles are moving at the same average speed. However, the total thermal energy of an object can be influenced by its mass and specific heat capacity, which relate to its size. Thus, while temperature itself is independent of size, the overall thermal energy of an object may vary with its volume.
not size but value of the formula V=(nRT/P) where V is the Volume, T is the temperature, R is the gas constant and n is the amount of moles.
The volume of a gas depends on its pressure, temperature, and volume according to the ideal gas law PV = nRT. Without knowing the pressure, temperature, or container size, it's not possible to determine the volume occupied by the 0.48 moles of hydrogen.
The volume of a gas does not depend on its mass. The volume of a gas is determined by factors such as temperature and pressure according to the ideal gas law, while the mass of a gas is a measure of the amount of substance present.
Density depends on the mass and volume of a substance, as it is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume. Therefore, density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume.
Temperature: As temperature increases, gas particles move faster, increasing pressure and volume. Pressure: Higher pressure compresses gas particles closer together, reducing volume. Volume: Gas expands to fill the container it's in, with volume increasing as the container size increases.
This depends on the size and temperature of the ice cube and the ordinary water's temperature and volume.
not size but value of the formula V=(nRT/P) where V is the Volume, T is the temperature, R is the gas constant and n is the amount of moles.
The volume of a solid depends on the temperature.
The volume of a gas depends on its pressure, temperature, and volume according to the ideal gas law PV = nRT. Without knowing the pressure, temperature, or container size, it's not possible to determine the volume occupied by the 0.48 moles of hydrogen.
It depends on the size of the carrot. Their size varies.
The volume of gas depends on two things: pressure and temperature.
it depends on the size
its depends on the temperature.
it depends on the size but multiply the length by width and then by height to get the volume
That depends on the exact size of the orange.
density, temperature and pressure
no, no gas does, it depends on temperature and pressure.