Since volume is an extensive property, there is no particular constant associated with it - indeed, by virtue of being an extensive property, it is not constant unless the mass, temperature, pressure, phase, and composition remain constant.
There are, of course, conversion factors between different volume units - and the conversion factors are constants.
Yes it has! the specific heat of water at constant volume is given by cV : Heat capacity at constant volume cP : Heat capacity at constant pressure : Thermal expansion coefficient : Isothermal compressibility : Density
A liquid has a constant volume but no fixed shape.
At a constant volume the pressure increase.
if kelvin temp is halved, the volume is halved if pressure is constant.
No, when pressure and volume are inversely proportional at constant temperature, the graph of pressure vs. volume is a straight line. This relationship is described by Boyle's Law, which states that pressure multiplied by volume is constant when temperature is held constant.
The volume is constant. The pressure will increase.The volume is constant. The pressure will increase.
A solid has a constant volume and a determinate shape.A liquid has a constant volume but an indeterminate shape.A gas has an indeterminate volume and an indeterminate shape.liquids have a constant volume at a constant temperature, and take the shape of their container.
A solid has a constant volume and a determinate shape.A liquid has a constant volume but an indeterminate shape.A gas has an indeterminate volume and an indeterminate shape.liquids have a constant volume at a constant temperature, and take the shape of their container.
One is for constant pressure, the other is for constant volume. These are not the same; for example, if the pressure is maintained constant, and the gas is heated, the volume changes.
Yes it has! the specific heat of water at constant volume is given by cV : Heat capacity at constant volume cP : Heat capacity at constant pressure : Thermal expansion coefficient : Isothermal compressibility : Density
At constant temperature p.V=constant, so pressure INcreases when decreasing the volume.
A liquid has a constant volume but no fixed shape.
At a constant volume the pressure increase.
The constant Volume process, also known as Isovolumetric, is where the volume is constant and does not change. In a P, V, Diagram this should be where volume is constant where Pressure is increased. The work done (area under the curve) would be = to 0 in this case.
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 108 inches and a height of 206 inches is 32,677.8 US gallons.
A container with a volume of 14.44 cubic feet will hold 108 gallons of water.
It can but, not necessarily so. At a constant volume the temperature and pressure rise in direct proportion. At a constant temperature the volume is inversely proportionate to the pressure. At a constant pressure the volume is directly proportionate to the temperature.