If the volume is halved, without change in mass, the density will be doubled.
density
It would be half of the original volume. As you reduce the volume the pressure would increase and at half the original volume the pressure would be doubled.
The density of a material depends on the mass and the volume of that material. In order to find the density of a material you must multiple the mass of the material and the volume of the material.
Increasing the volume of a gas the pressure and density decreases.
Original density = M/VNew density = (KM)/(KV) = (K/K) (M/V) = original density.If the mass and volume both increase by the same factor, the density is unchanged.It only means that you have a larger piece of the same substance.
density
volume
When pressure increases the volume of the material decreases. Density=mass/volume When volume decreases density increases.(Mass constant)
Volume increased so density decreased
No, the pressure is the force exerted by the substance on the walls of its container. The word that comes to mind for "amount of substance in a certain volume" is concentration, though it might also be a somewhat awkward way of describing density.The amount of substance in a certain volume is the density of the substance. Pressure means the force applied in a unit area. So the amount of substance in a certain volume is not the pressure.
Avogadro's principle can be applied when the temperature, volume and pressure are the same. This principle was named after Amedeo Avogadro.
Density = mass/volume so it is related to mass and volume. And Volume is related to temperature and pressure, so it is related to those as well.
It would be half of the original volume. As you reduce the volume the pressure would increase and at half the original volume the pressure would be doubled.
The density of a material depends on the mass and the volume of that material. In order to find the density of a material you must multiple the mass of the material and the volume of the material.
It decreases
the pressure and the temperature increases, and the volume is reduced.
Pressure can change the volume of all three (to varying degrees) and density = mass (which doesn't change) divided by volume.