You are watching a new bridge being built near your house. You notice during the construction that two concrete spans are placed end to end to form a span of length L i . However, they are placed end to end so that no room is allowed for expansion (Fig. P18.11a). In the opening storyline for this chapter, we talked about buckling sidewalks. The same thing will happen with spans on bridges if allowance is not made for expansion (Fig. P18.11b). You want to warn the construction crew about this dangerous situation, so you calculate the height y to which the spans will rise when they buckle in response to a temperature increase of Δ T .
You are watching a new bridge being built near your house. You notice during the construction that two concrete spans are placed end to end to form a span of length L i . However, they are placed end to end so that no room is allowed for expansion (Fig. P18.11a). In the opening storyline for this chapter, we talked about buckling sidewalks. The same thing will happen with spans on bridges if allowance is not made for expansion (Fig. P18.11b). You want to warn the construction crew about this dangerous situation, so you calculate the height y to which the spans will rise when they buckle in response to a temperature increase of Δ T .
You are watching a new bridge being built near your house. You notice during the construction that two concrete spans are placed end to end to form a span of length Li. However, they are placed end to end so that no room is allowed for expansion (Fig. P18.11a). In the opening storyline for this chapter, we talked about buckling sidewalks. The same thing will happen with spans on bridges if allowance is not made for expansion (Fig. P18.11b). You want to warn the construction crew about this dangerous situation, so you calculate the height y to which the spans will rise when they buckle in response to a temperature increase of ΔT.
Three moles of an ideal gas undergo a reversible isothermal compression at 20.0° C. During this compression,
1900 J of work is done on the gas.
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Entropy change in a free expansion.
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What is the change of entropy of the gas?
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J/K
5.97 Block A, with weight
3w, slides down an inclined plane
S of slope angle 36.9° at a constant
speed while plank B, with weight
w, rests on top of A. The plank
is attached by a cord to the wall
(Fig. P5.97). (a) Draw a diagram
of all the forces acting on block
A. (b) If the coefficient of kinetic
friction is the same between A and
B and between S and A, determine
its value.
Figure P5.97
B
A
S
36.9°
Chapter 19 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update, Hybrid Edition (with Enhanced WebAssign Multi-Term LOE Printed Access Card for Physics)
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