Question for theoretical physics about gases
On Mar 14, 8:17*am, wrote:
On Feb 24, 7:06*pm, "Androcles" wrote:
wrote in message
....
On Feb 24, 3:54 pm, " wrote:
On Feb 22, 12:04 pm, wrote:
Sorry, Mr. "P/V = NRT".
You have already destroyed your own credibility.
MY credibility does not matter on this subject.
====================================
Oh... ok. At least now we know not to trust anything you say.
How ignorant are you f---ers???!!!!
Look, If T increases by 2.15. Pressure would increase by 2.15 at
constant volume. But suppose your container expands and increases it's
volume by 1.4. Then you place 2.15 over 1.4 in the formula, P/V.
2.15 divided by 1.4 = 1.536.
The Pressure is therefore 1.536 times that of the pressure in the
previous state. The volume is 1.4. The temperature is 2.15 times in
Kelvin scale higher than the previous state.
So you can write it PV = T because 1.4 x 1.536 = 2.15, and this is a
way to keep track of the relation of the energy and pressure in
relation to the fundamental constant R and the value of this energy
which represents the linear kinetic energy of the molecules which
establishes pressure, as it increases as a direct proportion to
absolute temperature, which is signified by multiplying it by
temperature in Kelvin as, RT.
SO THE HELL WHAT?
KD
|