College Physics
OER 2016 Edition
ISBN: 9781947172173
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Textbook Question
Chapter 15, Problem 5PE
Suppose a woman does 500 J of work and 9500 J of
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Suppose a woman does 450 J of work and 9300 J of heat transfer occurs into the environment in the process.
(a) What is the decrease in her internal energy (in kcal), assuming no change in temperature or consumption of food? (That is, there is no other energy transfer.)
(b) What is her efficiency (in percent)?
A(n) 63-kg sprinter accelerates from rest to a speed of 11.0 m/s in 5.6 s.
(a) Calculate the mechanical work done by the sprinter during this time.
(b) Calculate the average power the sprinter must generate.
(c) If the sprinter converts food energy to mechanical energy with an efficiency of 25%, at what average rate is he burning Calories?
Cal/s
(d) What happens to the other 75% of the food energy being used?
A(n) 88-kg sprinter accelerates from rest to a speed of 11.0 m/s in 4.2 s.
(a) Calculate the mechanical work done by the sprinter during this time.
J
(b) Calculate the average power the sprinter must generate.
W
(c) If the sprinter converts food energy to mechanical energy with an efficiency of 25%, at what average rate is he burning Calories?
Cal/s
(d) What happens to the other 75% of the food energy being used?
Chapter 15 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 15 - Describe the photo of the tea kettle at the...Ch. 15 - The first law of thermodynamics and the...Ch. 15 - Heat transfer Q and work done W are always energy...Ch. 15 - How do heat transfer and internal energy differ?...Ch. 15 - If you run down some stairs and stop, what happens...Ch. 15 - Give an explanation of how food energy (calories)...Ch. 15 - Identify the type of energy transferred to your...Ch. 15 - A great deal of effort time, and money has been...Ch. 15 - One method of converting heat transfer to doing...Ch. 15 - Would the previous question make any sense for an...
Ch. 15 - We ordinarily say that U=0 for an isothermal...Ch. 15 - The temperature of a rapidly expanding gas...Ch. 15 - Which cyclical process represented by the two...Ch. 15 - A real process may be nearly adiabatic if it...Ch. 15 - It is unlikely that a process can be isothermal...Ch. 15 - Imagine you are driving a car up Pike’s Peak in...Ch. 15 - Is a temperature difference necessary to operate a...Ch. 15 - Definitions of efficiency vary depending on how...Ch. 15 - Whyother than the fact that the second law of...Ch. 15 - Prob. 20CQCh. 15 - Can improved engineering and materials be employed...Ch. 15 - Does the second law of thermodynamics alter the...Ch. 15 - Explain why heat pumps do not work as well in very...Ch. 15 - In some Northern European nations, homes are being...Ch. 15 - Why do refrigerators, air conditioners, and heat...Ch. 15 - Grocery store managers contend that there is less...Ch. 15 - Can you cool a kitchen by leaving the refrigerator...Ch. 15 - A woman shuts her summer cottage up in September...Ch. 15 - Consider a system with a certain energy content,...Ch. 15 - Does a gas become more orderly when it liquefies?...Ch. 15 - Explain how water’s entropy can decrease when it...Ch. 15 - Is a uniform-temperature gas more or less orderly...Ch. 15 - Give an example of a spontaneous process in which...Ch. 15 - What is the change in entropy in an adiabatic...Ch. 15 - Does the entropy at a star increase or decrease as...Ch. 15 - Explain why a building made of bricks has smaller...Ch. 15 - Explain why a building made of bricks has smaller...Ch. 15 - What is the change in internal energy of a car if...Ch. 15 - How much heat transfer occurs from a system, if...Ch. 15 - A system does 1.80108J of work while 7.50108J of...Ch. 15 - What is the change in internal energy of a system...Ch. 15 - Suppose a woman does 500 J of work and 9500 J of...Ch. 15 - (a) How much food energy will a man metabolize in...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the average metabolic rate in watts of...Ch. 15 - (a) How long will the energy in a 1470kJ (350kcal)...Ch. 15 - (a) A woman climbing the Washington Monument...Ch. 15 - A car tire contains 0.0380m3 S of air at a...Ch. 15 - A heliumfilled toy balloon has a gauge pressure of...Ch. 15 - Steam to drive an old—fashioned steam locomotive...Ch. 15 - A hand—driven tire pump has a piston with a 2.50cm...Ch. 15 - Calculate the net work output of a heat engine...Ch. 15 - What is the net work output of a heat engine that...Ch. 15 - Unreasonable Results What is wrong with the claim...Ch. 15 - (a) A cyclical heat engine, operating between...Ch. 15 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider a car's...Ch. 15 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider a car trip...Ch. 15 - A certain heat engine does 10.0 kJ of work and...Ch. 15 - With 2.56106J of heat transfer into this engine, a...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the work output of a cyclical heat...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the eficiency of a cyclical heat...Ch. 15 - The engine of a large Ship does 2.00108J of work...Ch. 15 - (a) How much heat transfer occurs to the...Ch. 15 - Assume that the turbines at a coal—powered power...Ch. 15 - This problem compares the energy output and heat...Ch. 15 - A certain gasoline engine has an efficiency of...Ch. 15 - A gascooled nuclear reactor operates between hot...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the hot reservoir temperature of a...Ch. 15 - Steam locomotives have an efficiency of 17.0% and...Ch. 15 - Practical steam engines utilize 450C steam, which...Ch. 15 - A coalfired electrical power station has an...Ch. 15 - Would you be willing to financially back an...Ch. 15 - Unreasonable Results (a) Suppose you want to...Ch. 15 - Unreasonable Results Calculate the cold reservoir...Ch. 15 - What is the coefficient of performance of an ideal...Ch. 15 - Suppose you have an ideal refrigerator that cools...Ch. 15 - What is the best coefficient of performance...Ch. 15 - In a very mild winter climate, a heat pump has...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the best coefficient of performance...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the best coefficient of performance...Ch. 15 - Suppose you want to operate an ideal refrigerator...Ch. 15 - An ideal heat pump is being considered for use in...Ch. 15 - A 4ton air conditioner removes 5.60107J (48,000...Ch. 15 - Show that the coefficients of performance of...Ch. 15 - (a) On a winter day, a certain house loses...Ch. 15 - On a hot summer day, 4.00106J of heat transfer...Ch. 15 - A hot rock ejected from a volcano's lava fountain...Ch. 15 - When 1.60105J of heat transfer occurs into a meat...Ch. 15 - The Sun radiates energy at the rate of 3.801026W...Ch. 15 - (a) In reaching equilibrium, how much heat...Ch. 15 - What is the decrease in entropy of 25.0 g of water...Ch. 15 - Find the increase in entropy of 1.00 kg of liquid...Ch. 15 - A large electrical power station generates 1000 MW...Ch. 15 - (a) How much heat transfer occurs from 20.0 kg of...Ch. 15 - Using Table 15.4, verify the contention that if...Ch. 15 - What percent of the time will you get something in...Ch. 15 - (a) If tossing 100 coins, how many ways...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the change in entropy if you start...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the change in entropy if you start...Ch. 15 - Prob. 1TPCh. 15 - Prob. 2TPCh. 15 - Prob. 3TPCh. 15 - Prob. 4TPCh. 15 - Prob. 5TPCh. 15 - Prob. 6TPCh. 15 - Prob. 7TPCh. 15 - Prob. 8TPCh. 15 - Prob. 9TPCh. 15 - Prob. 10TPCh. 15 - Prob. 11TPCh. 15 - Prob. 12TPCh. 15 - Prob. 13TPCh. 15 - Prob. 14TPCh. 15 - Prob. 15TPCh. 15 - Prob. 16TP
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- Show that the coefficients of performance of refrigerators and heat pumps are related by COPref=COPhp1. Start with the definitions of the COP s and the conservation of energy relationship between Qh, QC, and W.arrow_forwardMany decisions are made on the basis of the payback period: the time it will take through savings to equal the capital cost of an investment. Acceptable payback times depend upon the business or philosophy one has. For some industries, a payback period is as small as 2 yeas) Suppose you wish to install the extra insulation in the preceding problem. If energy cost $1.00 per million joules and the insulation was $4.00 per square meter, then calculate the simple payback time. Take the average T for the 120-day heating season to be 15.0 .arrow_forwardThe energy output of a heat pump is greater than the energy used to operate the pump. Why doesn't this statement violate the first law of thermodynamics?arrow_forward
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