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GO Icicles. Liquid water coats an active (growing) icicle and extends up a short, narrow tube along the central axis (Fig 18-55). Because the water–ice interface must have a temperature of 0°C, the water in the tube cannot lose energy through the sides of the icicle or down through the tip because there is no temperature change in those directions. It can lose energy and freeze only by sending energy up (through distance L) to the top of the icicle, where the temperature Tr can be below 0°C. Take L = 0.12 m and Tr = −5°C. Assume that the central tube and the upward
Figure 18-55 Problem 78.
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- An aluminum rod 0.500 m in length and with a cross sectional area of 2.50 cm2 is inserted into a thermally insulated vessel containing liquid helium at 4.20 K. The rod is initially at 3(H) K. (a) If one-halt of the rod is inserted into the helium, how many liters of helium boil off by the time the inserted half cools to 4.20 K? Assume the upper half does not yet cool, (b) If the circular surface of the upper end of the rod is maintained at 300 K. what is the approximate boil-off rate of liquid helium in liters per second after the lower half has reached 4.20 K? (Aluminum has thermal conductivity of 3 100 YV/m K at 4.20 K; ignore its temperature variation. The density of liquid helium is 125 kg/m3.)arrow_forward..60 GO Figure Figure 18-46 shows the cross section of a wall made of three layers. The layer thicknesses are L₁, L2=0.700L₁, and L3=0.350L₁. The thermal conductivities are k₁, k₂ = 0.900k₁, and k3= 0.800k₁. The temperatures at the left side and right side of the wall are TH = 30.0°C and Tc = -15.0°C, respectively. Ther- mal conduction is steady. (a) What is the temperature difference AT₂ across layer 2 (between the left and right sides of the layer)? If k₂ were, instead, equal to 1.1k₁, (b) would the rate at which energy is con- ducted through the wall be greater than, less than, or the same as pre- viously, and (c) what would be the value of AT₂? TH k₁ k₂ kg Tc L₁ L2 L3 Figure 18-46 Problem 60. Air Ice Waterarrow_forwardThe average coefficient of linear expansion of copper is 17 x 10-6 (°C)-1 . The Statue of Liberty is 93 in tall on a summer morning when the temperature is 25°C. Assume the copper plates covering the statue are mounted edge to edge without expansion joints and do not buckle or bind on the framework supporting them as the day grows hot. What is the order of magnitude of the statue's increase in height? (a) 0.1 mm (b) 1 mm (c) 1 cm (d) 10 cm (e) 1 mlarrow_forward
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- A container made of steel, which has a coefficient of linear expansion 11 x 10- (°C)-, has a volume of 55.0 gallons. The container is filled to the top with gasoline, which has a coefficient of volume expansion of 9.6 x 10-4 (°C)-, when the temperature is 10.0°C. If the temperature rises to 28.5°c, how much gasoline (in gal) will spill over the edge of the container? galarrow_forwardA steel rod is initially 1 meter long at a temperature of 20°C. Assuming that the expansion is uniform along the entire length of the rod , if the coefficient of linear expansion for steel is 11 x 10^-6 per degree Celsius, calculate: a) The change in length of the rod when its temperature is increased to 100°C. b) The final length of the rod at 100°C.arrow_forwardA brass rod has a circular cross-section of radius 5.00 cm. The rod enters a circular hole in a copper foil with a margin of 0.010 mm around its entire contour when both pieces are at 20.0 ° C. At what temperature must both metals be brought to make this margin zero? The coefficient of linear thermal expansion for brass is 20 × 10 ^ (- 6) ° C ^ (- 1) and that of copper is 17 × 10 ^ (- 6) ° C ^ (- 1).arrow_forward
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning