Gas molecules can affect air temperature through their ability to absorb and retain heat. When gas molecules absorb heat energy, they become energetically excited and increase in temperature, causing the overall air temperature to rise. Additionally, certain gases like greenhouse gases can trap heat in the atmosphere, leading to an increase in global temperatures through the greenhouse effect.
Temperature is not directly tied to volume, its related to pressure. Increasing the temperature will increase the pressure--only if volume is held constant. That is were volume and temperature are related, through pressure. However, if you increase the volume it does not change the temperature.
It will effect the Pressure [because the volume is constant]. Temperature is a measure of the kinetic energy of all the molecules of a particular substance. Low temperature means that the molecules are moving slowly. A high temperature means the molecules are moving very quickly. When particles are moving more quickly, they will hit against the walls of the container more frequently and with greater intensity, putting an expansionary pressure on the container, like a hot-air balloon. Conversely, slow moving particles hit against the walls of the container more infrequently and with less intensity, decreasing the overall pressure. Another way of saying this is that a hot gas will have greater volume and a cold gas will have less volume. OR, if you wish, hotter temperatures decrease the density of the gas while colder temperatures increase the density of the gas.
The seltzer tablets will likely have a cooling effect on the air temperature. As they dissolve and produce carbon dioxide gas, the process absorbs heat from the surrounding air, resulting in a decrease in temperature.
The air molecules would go very slow because the air molecules are tight close together.
If the temperature of a gas is doubled, the mean speed of the gas molecules will also double. This is because the average kinetic energy of the gas molecules is directly proportional to the temperature according to the kinetic theory of gases.
The speed of gas molecules is primarily determined by their temperature, not their specific identity. At the same temperature, bromine molecules and air molecules would have similar average speeds.
When gas molecules are heated, the molecules move more quickly, and the increased velocity causes more collisions. As a result, more force is exerted on each molecule and air pressure increases. Temperature affects air pressure at different altitudes due to a disparity in air density.
The temperature of a gas is related to the average kinetic energy of its molecules, which is directly proportional to their speed. Therefore, temperature indirectly measures the average speed of air molecules.
The temperature of air is determined by the kinetic energy of its individual gas molecules. Warmer air has molecules with higher kinetic energy, causing them to move faster and collide more frequently, resulting in a higher temperature.
The speed of gas molecules increases as the temperature of a gas increases.
When compressed air is released from a container, it expands rapidly, causing a drop in temperature due to the gas molecules losing energy as they spread out. This phenomenon is known as the Joule-Thomson effect.
Pressure increases if gas molecules slam into a surface either faster (higher temperature), hit harder (more mass), or more often (larger number of molecules). Pressure decreases if the gas molecules are generally moving parallel to the measuring surface, which is where the venturi effect and lift on wings can come from.
That depends on the pressure and temperature of the air in the cubic meter. Any time you change the pressure or the temperature of a gas, you change the number of molecules in one cubic meter of it.
Whatever it is, gas, vapor, liquid, solid - the higher the temperature, the higher is the local agitation/speed of the molecules/atoms.
The average speed of gas molecules is proportional to the square root of the temperature of the gas. As the temperature increases, the average speed of the molecules also increases. This is described by the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of speeds.
Temperature is not directly tied to volume, its related to pressure. Increasing the temperature will increase the pressure--only if volume is held constant. That is were volume and temperature are related, through pressure. However, if you increase the volume it does not change the temperature.
As air expands, it cools down due to a decrease in pressure. This cooling effect is due to the gas molecules moving further apart and losing energy. Consequently, the temperature of the air decreases as it expands.