Since there is no figure attached, I will describe the derivation of the ideal gas law. The combined
gas law has no official founder; it is simply the incorporation of the three
laws that was discovered. The combined gas law is a gas law that combines
Gay-Lussac’s Law, Boyle’s Law and Charle’s Law.
Boyle’s law states that pressure is inversely proportional with volume
at constant temperature. Charle’s law states that volume is directly
proportional with temperature at constant pressure. And Gay-Lussac’s law shows
that pressure is directly proportional with temperature at constant volume. The
combination of these laws known now as combined gas law gives the ratio between
the product of pressure-volume and the temperature of the system is constant.
Which gives PV/T=k(constant). When comparing a substance under different
conditions, the combined gas law becomes P1V1/T1 = P2V2/T2.
Araceli would have used 2.25 (or 2 1/4) yards of fabric for each bag.
Step-by-step explanation:
First, you have the 9 bags you are making and they all must be the same because they are identical, so you divide the nine bags by the four yards and I got an answer of 2.25 yards per bag. The answer can also be 2 1/4 as well.