No, the gas constant, or any constant, is constant meaning it doesn't change.
Yes, assuming that the environment in which the tea is "living" stays a constant temperature. Tea will cool at a constant rate, until it reaches the temperature of the environment (but it will not get any colder than this).
In case of BOYLE'S law,temperature is held constant! thank you!!
Temperature
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)
your mother
No, it is much colder near the tropopause.
what is the approximate height and temperature of the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere?
it ranges from °c +15.0 −56.5
the temp stays the same
The standard temperature lapse rate or environmental lapse rate as it is more commonly known is basically the temperature difference between the tropopause surface divided by height. This uses the formula -dT/dz and essentially shows the temperature decreasing as the height above the tropopause increases.
No. The tropopause is the boundary between the troposphere and that stratosphere.
No, no one , nothing on this planet has a constant temperature.
The troposphere's topmost boundary is the tropopause.
Temperature remain constant.
Hawaii is tropical and has the most constant temperature.
The constant k is a...constant specific for the system considered.