The pressure increases as well.
The gas constant is a number. It is measured in terms of energy per temperature increase per mole. It has no specific volume.
I suppose you mean the formula for the variation in pressure. The simplest expression of this is, at a fixed temperature,and for a given mass of gas, pressure x volume = constant. This is known as Boyle's Law. If the temperature is changing, then we get two relations: 1. If the pressure is fixed, volume = constant x temperature (absolute) 2. If the volume is fixed, pressure = constant x temperature (absolute) These can be combined into the ideal gas equation Pressure x Volume = constant x Temperature (absolute), or PV = RT where R = the molar gas constant. (Absolute temperature means degrees kelvin, where zero is -273 celsius)
Directly proportional, at pressure and temperature constant.
They are not the same, but related. From Wikipedia (article "gas constant"): " [The gas constant] is equivalent to the Boltzmann constant, but expressed in units of energy (i.e. the pressure-volume product) per temperature increment per mole (rather than energy per temperature increment per particle)".
Gay-Lussac's law
When the temperature of a gas is increased at a constant pressure, its volume increases. When the temperature of a gas is devreased at constnt pressure, its volume decreases.
as the pressure decreases the volume of gas increases at constant temperature
Charles found that when the temperature of a gas is increased at constant pressure, its volume increases. When the temperature of a gas is decreased at constant pressure, its volume decreases.
As pressure increases, if temperature is constant, the gas will decrease in volume.
At constant temperature if the volume of a gas decreses what should I do now
Increasing the temperature of a gas will increase it's pressure ONLY if the volume is held constant.
the pressure and temperature are held constant. ideal gas law: Pressure * Volume = moles of gas * temperature * gas constant
Universal Gas Law: P*V/T = a constant, where P = gas pressure [Pa], V = volume [m3], and T = gas temperature [K]. Therefore, when the gas temperature increases, the pressure increases linearly with it, when the volume is constant.
If the temperature of the gas is decreasing, then in order to maintain constant pressure, you would have to compress it in volume.
At a constant temperature, the volume and the pressure are inversely proportional, that it, the greater the volume, the lesser the pressure on the gas, and viceversa.
As pressure increases, if temperature is constant, the gas will decrease in volume.
Temperature increases as pressure increases.