menu
Qammunity.org
Login
Register
My account
Edit my Profile
Private messages
My favorites
If temperature and the number of particles remain constant, and increase in pressure will cause volume to -decrease -increase -remain the same -increase then decrease PLEASEEEE …
Ask a Question
Questions
Unanswered
Tags
Ask a Question
If temperature and the number of particles remain constant, and increase in pressure will cause volume to -decrease -increase -remain the same -increase then decrease PLEASEEEE …
asked
Nov 5, 2020
230k
views
0
votes
If temperature and the number of particles remain constant, and increase in pressure will cause volume to
-decrease
-increase
-remain the same
-increase then decrease
PLEASEEEE HELP
Physics
middle-school
Hanisha
asked
by
Hanisha
8.7k
points
answer
comment
share this
share
0 Comments
Please
log in
or
register
to add a comment.
Please
log in
or
register
to answer this question.
1
Answer
2
votes
The correct answer is remain the same because if the particles and temperature remain constant, when the pressure increases the temperature is not increasing so it would just stay the same
Artem Andreev
answered
Nov 11, 2020
by
Artem Andreev
7.9k
points
ask related question
comment
share this
0 Comments
Please
log in
or
register
to add a comment.
← Prev Question
Next Question →
No related questions found
Ask a Question
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.
9.4m
questions
12.2m
answers
Categories
All categories
Mathematics
(3.7m)
History
(955k)
English
(903k)
Biology
(716k)
Chemistry
(440k)
Physics
(405k)
Social Studies
(564k)
Advanced Placement
(27.5k)
SAT
(19.1k)
Geography
(146k)
Health
(283k)
Arts
(107k)
Business
(468k)
Computers & Tech
(195k)
French
(33.9k)
German
(4.9k)
Spanish
(174k)
Medicine
(125k)
Law
(53.4k)
Engineering
(74.2k)
Other Questions
Physical properties of minerals graphic organizer
What type of rock is the Haystack rock (igneous, Metamorphic, or Sedimentary)
what is a device that transforms thermal energy to mechanical energy
Twitter
WhatsApp
Facebook
Reddit
LinkedIn
Email
Link Copied!
Copy
Search Qammunity.org