A sample of an ideal gas consists of 2 moles, pressure = 1 atm, volume = 0.5 liters

Find the temperature

pV=nRT
T = p*V/(n*R)
T = 1 atm * 0.5 liters / (2 moles * .08206 L atm K^-1 * mol^-1)
T = 3.04 K

Did I do that problem correctly? That temperature seems unrealistically low.

Yes, that's correct. Note that

T = p*v/(n*R)
so T = 273 K when p is 1 atm, v is 22.4 L, and n = 1. So you have reduced v from 22.4 to 0.5 AND you have reduced the number even more by doubling the denominator.

Yes, you did the problem correctly. However, I think there might be an error in your calculation.

The ideal gas law equation is: PV = nRT

To find the temperature (T), you need to rearrange the equation:

T = PV / (nR)

Now, substitute the given values:

P = 1 atm (pressure)
V = 0.5 L (volume)
n = 2 moles (number of moles)
R = 0.08206 L∙atm/(mol∙K) (gas constant)

T = (1 atm * 0.5 L) / (2 moles * 0.08206 L∙atm/(mol∙K))
T = 0.025 L∙atm/(mol∙K)

Now, let's calculate the result:

T = 0.025 L∙atm/(mol∙K)

The unit of atm gets canceled out with L, resulting in 0.025 K/mol, which is a reasonable temperature. It seems like you made a mistake in the calculation, as the value you obtained, 3.04 K, is much higher than expected for the given conditions.