At a constant pressure, the volume of a gas doubles when the temperature in kelvins doubles. this is a statement of which gas law?

Video Transcript

Here the volume of gas doubles when the temperature in kelvin double a constant pressure that gives these 2 conies are directly proportional to each other. Then, according to charles law, the volium of ideal gas at the cones temperature is directly proportional to the absolute temperature. So mathematically we can write for the 2 memon by v. T 1 will be equal to v 2 by t tint, hence for the given case. The second option, charles low, is so this is the answer.

When constant pressure the volume of a gas will the temperature is doubled?

Increasing the Kelvin temperature increases the volume. The two quantities are directly proportional to one another. A doubling of the Kelvin temperature will double the volume of the gas.

What will happen to the volume of the Kelvin temperature doubles and the pressure remains constant?

For a fixed mass of gas at constant pressure, the volume is directly proportional to the kelvin temperature. That means, for example, that if you double the kelvin temperature from, say to 300 K to 600 K, at constant pressure, the volume of a fixed mass of the gas will double as well.

What does Charles law state?

The physical principle known as Charles' law states that the volume of a gas equals a constant value multiplied by its temperature as measured on the Kelvin scale (zero Kelvin corresponds to -273.15 degrees Celsius).

What happens to the volume and temperature in Kelvin of a gas at constant pressure?

Charles's law states that the volume of a given amount of gas is directly proportional to its temperature on the kelvin scale when the pressure is held constant.