billdedman
Automotive
- Jan 27, 2002
- 1
If a volume of a gas (say, ambient atmospheric air) is reduced in a sealed container, to 1/2 of its original volume, doesn't it follow that the pressure would double?
Is this phenomenon linear in nature, all the way up to say, a 10:1 reduction in volume?
If it's NOT linear, why not? Would the rise in temperature due to compression have any effect on the pressure increase?
Thanks much for any information.
Bill Dedman in Hayward, CA
(billdedman@hotmail.com
Is this phenomenon linear in nature, all the way up to say, a 10:1 reduction in volume?
If it's NOT linear, why not? Would the rise in temperature due to compression have any effect on the pressure increase?
Thanks much for any information.
Bill Dedman in Hayward, CA
(billdedman@hotmail.com