L has twice the volume of container J. Container J is at a temperature of 100 K, and container L is at 200 K. How does the pressure in container J compare with that in container L

It depends on what is inside the container. If a gas

Then the higher temperature is twice the pressure of the lower temperature container.

P1/P2=T1/T2 Read about Charles' Law http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%27s_law

To compare the pressure in container J with container L, we need to use the ideal gas law equation: PV = nRT, where P is the pressure, V is the volume, n is the number of moles of gas, R is the ideal gas constant, and T is the temperature in Kelvin.

Given that container J has a volume of Vj, and container L has twice the volume of container J, then container L would have a volume of Vl = 2Vj.

We are told that container J is at a temperature of 100 K, and container L is at 200 K.

Let's assume that the number of moles of gas in both containers is the same, so nJ = nL = n.

Now, let's compare the pressures in the two containers using the ideal gas law equation.

For container J:
PJ * Vj = n * R * TJ

For container L:
PL * Vl = n * R * TL

Since we are comparing the pressures, let's divide the two equations:

(PJ * Vj) / (PL * Vl) = (n * R * TJ) / (n * R * TL)

Simplifying:

Vj / Vl = TJ / TL

Since Vl is twice the volume of Vj, we can substitute Vl = 2Vj:

Vj / (2Vj) = 100 K / 200 K

1/2 = 1/2

Therefore, the pressure in container J is equal to the pressure in container L.

In conclusion, the pressure in container J is the same as the pressure in container L.