law and Charles's law.
Gay-Lussac's Law Charles's Law
O involves changes in temperature
O has a constant volume
O shows an inversely proportional relationship
O does not involve pressure changes
Answer:
A) involves changes in temperature
Explanation:
The figure is missing, but I assume that the region marked X represents the region in common between Gay-Lussac's law and Charle's Law.
Gay-Lussac's law states that:
"For an ideal gas kept at constant volume, the pressure of the gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature"
Mathematically, it can be written as
where p is the pressure of the gas and T its absolute temperature.
Charle's Law states that:
"For an ideal gas kept at constant pressure, the volume of the gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature"
Mathematically, it can be written as
where V is the volume of the gas and T its absolute temperature.
By looking at the two descriptions of the law, we see immediately that the property that they have in common is
A) involves changes in temperature
Since the temperature is NOT kept constant in the two laws.
Answer:
gas
Explanation:
The sky is not a solid body, nor does it have all of the same the physical properties of a solid body. In terms of its behavior, physically a gas is much closer to a liquid than a solid. If you drop the temperature of the atmosphere quick enough and low enough it can become a solid.
Оа
Ob
Ос
0.39 moles
6405.00 moles
128.10 g
2.56 moles
Review Answers
Answer:
0.39 moles
Explanation:
To find how many moles are in 50.0 g of CaC₂O₄ you divide the grams of the sample by the molar mass of the compound;
=0.39 mol
The grams cancel out and you are left with moles!
I hope this help ^-^
are renewable natural resources.
B.
are in very short supply for consumers.
C.
release carbon dioxide when they are burned.
D.
are clean fuels that contribute little to pollution.
answer- release carbon dioxide when burned
coal, oil, and natural gas release carbon dioxide when they are burned and definitely contribute to air pollution.
b. false