College Physics
OER 2016 Edition
ISBN: 9781947172173
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Textbook Question
Chapter 14, Problem 26CQ
On average, would Earth be warmer or cooler without the atmosphere? Explain your answer.
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Snakes and other reptiles that live on land warm up in the sun. Their bodies can reach temperatures well above the ambient air temperature. But fish don’t do this. Most fish are at nearly the same temperature as the water in which they swim. How do you explain the difference?
Suppose that a planet with no atmosphere orbits a Sunlike star at the same radius as the Earth’s orbit and keeps the same face toward the sun at all times. The planet reflects 40% of the light falling on it, and the average temperature on the facing surface is nearly uniform and 185 K larger than the nearly uniform temperature on its back surface. What is the planet’s average temperature?
The planet's average planetary temperature is _______ K.
At night, the surface of the earth cools, mostly by radiation. The surface radiates energy upward; the much cooler sky above radiates much less. Patches of ground under trees can stay warmer, which is why, if you live somewhere that has cold, clear nights, you may have noticed some mornings when there is frost on open patches of ground but not under trees. Why does being under a tree keep the ground warmer?
Chapter 14 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 14 - How is heat transfer related to temperature?Ch. 14 - Describe a situation in which heat transfer...Ch. 14 - When heal transfers into a system, is the energy...Ch. 14 - What three factors affect the heat transfer that...Ch. 14 - The brakes in a car increase in temperature by T...Ch. 14 - Heat transfer can cause temperature and phase...Ch. 14 - How does the latent heat of fusion of water help...Ch. 14 - What is me temperature of ice right after it is...Ch. 14 - If you place 0C ice into 0C water in an insulated...Ch. 14 - What effect does condensation on a glass of ice...
Ch. 14 - In my humid climates where there are numerous...Ch. 14 - In winters, if is often warmer in San Francisco...Ch. 14 - Putting a lid on a boiling pot greatly reduces the...Ch. 14 - Freeze-dried toads have been dehydrated in a...Ch. 14 - When still air cools by radiating at night, it is...Ch. 14 - In a physics classroom demonstration, an...Ch. 14 - What are the main methods of heat transfer front...Ch. 14 - Some electric sieves have a flat ceramic surface...Ch. 14 - Loosefitting white clothing covering most at the...Ch. 14 - One way to make a fireplace more energy efficient...Ch. 14 - On cold, clear nights horses will sleep under the...Ch. 14 - When watching a daytime circus in a large,...Ch. 14 - Satellites designed to observe me radiation from...Ch. 14 - Why are cloudy nights generally warmer than clear...Ch. 14 - Why are thermometers that are used in weather...Ch. 14 - On average, would Earth be warmer or cooler...Ch. 14 - On a hot day, the temperature of an 80,000L...Ch. 14 - Show that 1cal/gC=1kcal/kgC.Ch. 14 - To sterilize a 50.0g glass baby bottle, we must...Ch. 14 - The same heat transfer into identical masses of...Ch. 14 - Rubbing your hands together warms them by...Ch. 14 - A 0.250kg block at a pure material is heated from...Ch. 14 - Suppose identical amounts of heat transfer into...Ch. 14 - (a) The number of kilocalories in food is...Ch. 14 - Following Vigorous exercise, the body temperature...Ch. 14 - Even when shut down after a period of normal use,...Ch. 14 - How much heat transfer (in kilocalories) is...Ch. 14 - A bag containing 0C ice is much more effective in...Ch. 14 - (a) How much heat transfer is required to raise...Ch. 14 - The formation of condensation on a glass of ice...Ch. 14 - On a trip, you notice that a 3.50kg bag of ice...Ch. 14 - On a certain dry sunny day, a swimming pool’s...Ch. 14 - (a) How much heat transfer is necessary to raise...Ch. 14 - In 1986, a gargantuan iceberg broke away from the...Ch. 14 - How many grams of coffee must evaporate from 350 g...Ch. 14 - (a) It is difficult to extinguish a fire on a...Ch. 14 - The energy released from condensation in...Ch. 14 - To help prevent from damage, 4.00 kg at 0C water...Ch. 14 - A 0.250kg aluminum bowl holding 0.800 kg of soup...Ch. 14 - A 0.0500kg ice cube at 30.0C is placed in 0.400 kg...Ch. 14 - If you pour 0.0100 kg of 20.0C water onto a 1.20kg...Ch. 14 - Indigenous people sometimes cook in watertight...Ch. 14 - What would be the final temperature of the pan and...Ch. 14 - In some countries, liquid nitrogen is used on...Ch. 14 - Some gun fanciers make their own bullets, which...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction through...Ch. 14 - The rate of heat conduction out of a window on a...Ch. 14 - Calculate the rate of heat conduction out of the...Ch. 14 - Suppose you stand with one foot on ceramic...Ch. 14 - A man consumes 3000 kcal of food in one day....Ch. 14 - (a) A firewalker runs across a bed of hot coals...Ch. 14 - (a) What is the rate of heat conduction through...Ch. 14 - A walrus transfers energy by conduction through...Ch. 14 - Compare the rate of heat conduction through a...Ch. 14 - Suppose a person is covered head to foot by wool...Ch. 14 - Some stove tops are smooth ceramic for easy...Ch. 14 - One easy way to reduce heating (and cooling) costs...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction through...Ch. 14 - Many decisions are made on the basis of the...Ch. 14 - For the human body, what is the rate of heat...Ch. 14 - At what wind speed does 10C air cause the same...Ch. 14 - At what temperature does still air cause the same...Ch. 14 - The “steam” above a freshly made cup of instant...Ch. 14 - (a) How many kilograms of water must evaporate...Ch. 14 - On a hot dry day, evaporation from a lake has just...Ch. 14 - One winter day, the climate control system of a...Ch. 14 - The Kilauea volcano in Hawaii is the world’s most...Ch. 14 - During heavy exercise, the body pumps 2.00 L of...Ch. 14 - A person inhales and exhales 2.00 L of 37.0C air,...Ch. 14 - A glass coffee pot has a circular bottom with a...Ch. 14 - At what net rate does heat radiate from a 275m2...Ch. 14 - (a) Cherry-red embers in a fireplace are at 850C...Ch. 14 - Radiation makes it impossible to stand close to a...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the rate of heat transfer by...Ch. 14 - Find the net rate of heat transfer by radiation...Ch. 14 - Suppose you walk into a sauna that has an ambient...Ch. 14 - Thermography is a technique for measuring radiant...Ch. 14 - The Sun radiates like a perfect black body with an...Ch. 14 - A large body of lava from a volcano has stopped...Ch. 14 - Calculate the temperature the entire sky would...Ch. 14 - (a) A shirtless rider under a circus tent feels...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts One 30.0C day the relative...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts Large meteors sometimes strike...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts Frozen waste from airplane...Ch. 14 - €69. Integrated Concepts (a) A large electrical...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts (a) Suppose you start a...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts A 76.0-kg person suffering...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts In certain large geographic...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts Heat transfers from your lungs...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts (a) What is the temperature...Ch. 14 - Integrated Concepts Hot air rises because it has...Ch. 14 - Unreasonable Results (a) What is the temperature...Ch. 14 - Unreasonable Results A slightly deranged Arctic...Ch. 14 - Unreasonable Results (a) Calculate the rate of...Ch. 14 - Unreasonable Results A meteorite 1.20 cm in...Ch. 14 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider a new model of...Ch. 14 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider a person...Ch. 14 - Prob. 1TPCh. 14 - Prob. 2TPCh. 14 - Prob. 3TPCh. 14 - Prob. 4TPCh. 14 - Prob. 5TPCh. 14 - Prob. 6TPCh. 14 - Prob. 7TPCh. 14 - Prob. 8TPCh. 14 - Prob. 9TPCh. 14 - Prob. 10TP
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- What are the following temperatures on the Kelvin scale? (a) 68.0 F, an indoor temperature sometimes recommended for energy conservation in winter (b) 134 F, one of the highest atmospheric temperatures ever recorded on Earth (Death Valley, California, 1913) (c) 9890 F, the temperature of the surface of the Sunarrow_forwardAt 25.0 m below the surface of the sea, where the temperature is 5.00C, a diver exhales an air bubble having a volume of 1.00 cm3. If the surface temperature of the sea is 20.0C, what is the volume of the bubble just before it breaks the surface?arrow_forwardThe density or gasoline is 7.30 102 kg/m3 at 0C. Its average coefficient of volume expansion is 9.60 104(C)1 and note that 1.00 gal = 0.003 80 m3. (a) Calculate the mass of 10.0 gal of gas at 0C. (b) If 1.000 m3 of gasoline at 0C is warmed by 20.0C, calculate its new volume. (c) Using the answer to part (b), calculate the density of gasoline at 20.0C. (d) Calculate the mass of 10.0 gal of gas at 20.0C. (e) How many extra kilograms of gasoline would you get if you bought 10.0 gal of gasoline at 0C rather than at 20.0C from a pump that is not temperature compensated?arrow_forward
- You are in space, compare the rate of heat loss for bare skin vs. a nice thick layer of polychloroprene (space suit material). How thick should your space suit be to be comfortable? specific heat of human body is 3500 J/kg K, specific heat of polychloroprene 2200 J/kg K, temperature in space 2.6 K.arrow_forwardWhen night falls, the temperature of the earth’s surface starts to drop. On a cool night, dew starts to form on the grass as water vapor condenses. Once dew starts to form, the rate of temperature decrease slows. Explain why this change occurs.arrow_forwardQuestion 26 Suppose the sun was twice its current temperature. Recall, the sun is 7 x 105 km in radius, with a surface temperature of 5800 K., and our distance from the sun is D = 150 million km. Using the equation to model the temperature of the earth, (sun)1/4 Tsun and remembering you have to work in the absolute temperature 4D² scale (OK = -273°C), what would happen to the temperature of the earth (in Kelvin scale)? It would be a quarter times as hot. It would twice as hot. It would be four times as hot. It would be half as hot.arrow_forward
- question in picture pleasearrow_forwardAt night, the surface of the earth cools, mostly by radiation. The surface radiates energy upward; the much cooler sky above radiates much less. Patches of ground under trees can stay warmer, which is why, if you livesomewhere that has cold, clear nights, you may have noticed some mornings when there is frost on open patches of ground but not under trees. Why does being under a tree keep the ground warmer?arrow_forwardcan you help me find the answerarrow_forward
- A piece of square copper sheet with a hole in the middle was heated. Due to thermal expansion, will the hole in the middle expand or shrink with the metal? Explain your answer.arrow_forwardOn a hot Saturday morning while people are working inside, the air conditioner keeps the temperature inside the building at 24°C. At noon the air conditioner is turned off, and the people go home. The temperature outside is a constant 34°C for the rest of the afternoon. If the time constant for the building is 5 hr, what will be the temperature inside the building at 4:00 P.M.? At 6:00 P.M.? When will the temperature inside the building reach 26°C? At 4:00 P.M., the temperature inside the building will be about (Round to the nearest tenth as needed.) 1°C.arrow_forward= At coffee house with constant temperature A 90°F, I got a cup of coffee whose temperature was To = 210°F. I waited for 15 minutes, and the coffee's temperature dropped to T15 150°F. If I want to drink it at precisely Tx = 105°F, how much longer should I wait? =arrow_forward
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