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The Laws Of GAS!! ;-p

Boyle's law shows that, at constant temperature, the product of an ideal gas's pressure and volume is always constant. It was published in 1662. It can be determined experimentally using a pressure gauge and a variable volume container. It can also be found through the use of logic; if a container, with a fixed amount of molecules inside, is reduced in volume, more molecules will hit the sides of the container per unit time, causing a greater pressure.

k just stands for the constant in the equation

As a mathematical equation, Boyle's law is:

PV=k1

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Charles's Law, or the law of volumes, was found in 1678. It says that, for an ideal gas at constant pressure, the volume is directly proportional to the absolute temperature (in kelvins).

This can be found using the kinetic theory of gases or a heated container with a variable volume (such as a conical flask with a balloon).

Boyle's law shows that, at constant temperature, the product of an ideal gas's pressure and volume is always constant. It was published in 1662. It can be determined experimentally using a pressure gauge and a variable volume container. It can also be found through the use of logic; if a container, with a fixed amount of molecules inside, is reduced in volume, more molecules will hit the sides of the container per unit time, causing a greater pressure.

As a mathematical formula, this is:

P=k3T

The pressure (or Gay-Lussac's) law was found by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in 1809. It states that the pressure exerted on a container's sides by an ideal gas is proportional to the absolute temperature of the gas. This follows from the kinetic theory—by increasing the temperature of the gas, the molecules' speeds increase meaning an increased amount of collisions with the container walls.

Avogadro's law states that the volume occupied by an ideal gas is proportional to the amount of moles (or molecules) present in the container. This gives rise to the molar volume of a gas, which at STP is 22.4 dm3 (or liters).

V=k4n

As a mathematical equation, Boyle's law is:

Charles's Law, or the law of volumes, was found in 1678. It says that, for an ideal gas at constant pressure, the volume is directly proportional to the absolute temperature (in kelvins).

This can be found using the kinetic theory of gases or a heated container with a variable volume (such as a conical flask with a balloon).

v=k2T

Where T is the absolute temperature of the gas (in kelvins) and k2 (in m3·K−1) is the constant produced.

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