When you increase the speed while keeping mass constant, the kinetic energy increases. Kinetic energy is directly proportional to the square of the velocity, so as speed increases, kinetic energy increases even more rapidly.
at constant temperature in a closedcontainer the increase in temperature increases the volume of a gas but not the mass.
It will increase? No it will decrease when the same amount of gas is held at constant temperature.
The kinetic energy of the particle increases as the speed increases, following the equation ( KE = \frac{1}{2} mv^2 ) where ( KE ) is the kinetic energy, ( m ) is the mass of the particle, and ( v ) is the speed of the particle. The energy of the particle is converted to kinetic energy as its speed increases.
It increases as the temperature increases.
Volume increases
The rate constant decreases.
The velocity increases at a constant rate.
Acceleration increases
When the Temperature increases, so does the Pressure.
If the frequency remains constant, then the wavelength increases.
Force increases.
it also increases in the same proportion as stress. Stress equals strain times a constant, where the constant is Young's modulus. This is Hooke's Law
If autonomous expenditure increases, it will lead to a corresponding increase in aggregate demand in the economy. This can result in economic growth and potentially lower levels of unemployment as firms increase production to meet the higher demand. However, if the increase in autonomous expenditure is too rapid, it could lead to inflationary pressures in the economy.
In the short run nothing happens to price
they go up
If temperature remains constant and the volume of gas increases, the pressure will decrease. This is described by Boyle's Law, which states that pressure and volume are inversely proportional when temperature is constant.