Boyle’s law
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Journal of Applied Physiology - The original presentation of Boyle’s law
- Khan Academy - Boyle's law
- Chemistry LibreTexts - Boyle’s Law- Pressure and Volume
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - Physiology, Boyle's Law
- University of Pennsylvania - Arts and Sciences - Verification of Boyle's Law
- NASA - Boyle's Law
- IOPscience - An equipment design to verify Boyle’s law
- Physics Research at the University of Virginia - Boyle’s Law and the Law of Atmospheres
- Also called:
- Mariotte’s law
- Key People:
- Robert Boyle
- Edme Mariotte
- Related Topics:
- ideal gas law
- kinetic theory of gases
- gas laws
- compression
- On the Web:
- IOPscience - An equipment design to verify Boyle’s law (Oct. 21, 2024)
Boyle’s law, a relation concerning the compression and expansion of a gas at constant temperature. This empirical relation, formulated by the physicist Robert Boyle in 1662, states that the pressure (p) of a given quantity of gas varies inversely with its volume (v) at constant temperature; i.e., in equation form, pv = k, a constant. The relationship was also discovered by the French physicist Edme Mariotte (1676).
The law can be derived from the kinetic theory of gases assuming a perfect (ideal) gas (see perfect gas). Real gases obey Boyle’s law at sufficiently low pressures, although the product pv generally decreases slightly at higher pressures, where the gas begins to depart from ideal behaviour.