Is this any different? It asking what the NEW pressure is throws me off.
Do I still just use PV = nRT
You still use the same equation. Note that if you change pressure gas must change volume or tepmerature for the pV=nRT to be correct - and indeed it does. Note also that pV=nRT can be written in many different ways, depending on the situation. Forexample, if you have a closed container and constant tmperature T and n doesn't change, which measn right side of the equation is constant:
pV = const
which is sometimes written as
p
1V
1 = p
2V
2What does it mean? If you V
1 of ideal gas and its pressure is p
1, and you compress that gas to V
2 it must have p
2 pressure (is it related in any way to your cas question?)
But these things must be described in the textbook you should be using, and they are described in MANY on line lectures. Please refer to the first, and ask questions here as the last resort, not first.
Also, How the heck do I figure THIS out???
Estimate the number of moles of gas (and mass of gas assuming that it is all N2) inside your family car (or a friends if you don't have one). If the amount of gas was compressed at constant temperature to fit inside a coke can what ould the pressure inside the coke can be?
Where is the problem? First - try to assume inside of the car has a shape that you can do volume calculations easily. Then it is pV=nRT again.