Physics, asked by sarthakbhatia4944, 1 day ago

if the absolute temperature of a gas is doubled what happens to the root-mean-square

Answers

Answered by ccurry2028
0

Answer:

The rms velocity is directly proportional to the square root of temperature and inversely proportional to the square root of molar mass. Thus quadrupling the temperature of a given gas doubles the rms velocity of the molecules. ... As the temperature of a gas is increased, the velocity of the molecules is also increased.

Explanation:

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Answered by tpitts6
0

Answer:

quadrupling the temperature

Explanation:

The rms velocity is directly proportional to the square root of temperature and inversely proportional to the square root of molar mass. Thus quadrupling the temperature of a given gas doubles the rms velocity of the molecules. ... As the temperature of a gas is increased, the velocity of the molecules is also increased.

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