Charles' law of gases (V=kT where V=volume, T=temperature, k=some proportionality constant) states that Volume and Temperature are directly proportional. That is: as the temperature of a gas increases, so will the volume. Similarly, as the temperature decreases, so will the volume and vice versa. With all that said, I don't know because this answer was a "yes or no" question. See that sh.it I did there? It's all rubbish, because I copied and pasted into it. You figure it out.
Direct
direct
direct
direct means it stays the same while inverse means it will change.
Direct
Boyle's Law is an indirect relationship. (Or an inverse)
Charles Augustin de Coulomb is credited with the discovery of the inverse square law. It was used by Isaac Newton in his prismatic experiments.
Boyle's Law is an inverse relationship. It states that the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume, when the temperature is kept constant. This means that as the volume of a gas decreases, the pressure increases, and vice versa.
Direct
direct
the relationship between pressure and volume a direct or inverse?
Charles's Law is a direct relationship between the temperature and volume of a gas at constant pressure. This means that as the temperature of a gas increases, its volume also increases, and vice versa.
direct
direct means it stays the same while inverse means it will change.
In Boyle's Law, temperature and the number of gas particles are held constant. In Charles's Law, pressure and the number of gas particles are held constant. In the Combined Gas Law, the number of gas particles is typically held constant while temperature, pressure, and volume vary.
The law of Avogadro is: equal volumes of gases contain the same number of molecules at constant pressure and temperature. The relation is direct.
direct proportion: y=kx inverse proportion: y=k/x