Chemistry, asked by sarathkumaren6792, 11 months ago

A container has n molecules at absolute temperature t. If the number of molecules is doubled but kinetic energy in the box remain the same as before, the absolute temperature of the gas is brainly

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Answered by somi173
0

The absolute temperature is the temperature at which the molecules of a system possess the lowest possible energy. You can also say that at this temperature the molecules of a substance have the Minimum possible energy.

As the molecules of a substance approach this temperature, their movement drop towards zero.

So if you double the number of molecules in a container at its absolute temperature, it will make no difference to their Kinetic Energy. The reason is that molecules have kinetic energy due to the motion. But when they have zero movement, they will have no kinetic energy.

The absolute temperature of a gas is taken as ABSOLUTE ZERO.

The absolute zero in Kelvin Scale is 0K.

The absolute zero in Celsius scale is -273.15 C


nazsah: I think its not the answer which sarath is seeking @somi173
Answered by Anonymous
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