Ideal Gas Law
Вставка
- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- 131 - Ideal Gas Law
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the pressure, volume, amount, and temperature of an ideal gas are related. Absolute zero of a gas can be determined by varying the temperature and measuring the corresponding volume of a gas sample. Several examples including Boyle's and Charle's Law are included.
Do you speak another language? Help me translate my videos:
www.bozemanscie...
Music Attribution
Title: String Theory
Artist: Herman Jolly
sunsetvalley.ba...
All of the images are licensed under creative commons and public domain licensing:
“Absolute Zero.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, May 12, 2015. en.wikipedia.or....
“Boomerang Nebula.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, February 13, 2015. en.wikipedia.or....
“Ideal Gas Law.” Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, May 12, 2015. en.wikipedia.or....
Jlpons. English: Elastic Collision within an Ideal Gas, [object HTMLTableCellElement]. Own work. commons.wikimed....
USA, Steve Jurvetson from Menlo Park. These Are Two of My Favorite Things…, February 28, 2010. Pipes + Wires. commons.wikimed....
this dude is keeping me eligible to play college basketball. Fucking Genius
better experiment for the balloon/volume thing is to submerge balloon in different temperatures of water and measure water displacement to find volume.
STEM-C is waving at you♥️
STEM-C is waving at you♥️
Thank you for the refresher course!
Excellent video!!
Deflategate explained!
no it was not helpful
better experiment for the balloon/volume thing is to submerge balloon in different temperatures of water and measure water displacement to find volume.
Nice
👍
Great video. I learned a lot.
how about temperature's affect on pressure. how would this affect something like air tools
@ *Bozeman Science*
Can you answer my question: do *Ideal Gas Law* prove that so called "greenhouse gas effect" doesn't even exist?
Are you kidding. How can you call this an ideal gas video. You don't explain it.
This is stupid and not right! Even at zero temperature we have movement - This movement is the zero point energy and that´s why it´s called Zero point energy...