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FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICS,AP ED.
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781119472780
Author: Halliday
Publisher: WILEY
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Chapter 20, Problem 14P
To determine
To find:
a) The value of
b) The value of
c) The value of
d) The value of
e) The value of
Expert Solution & Answer
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Students have asked these similar questions
4.) The diagram shows the electric field lines of a positively charged conducting sphere of
radius R and charge Q.
A
B
Points A and B are located on the same field line.
A proton is placed at A and released from rest. The magnitude of the work done by the electric field in
moving the proton from A to B is 1.7×10-16 J. Point A is at a distance of 5.0×10-2m from the centre of
the sphere. Point B is at a distance of 1.0×10-1 m from the centre of the sphere.
(a) Explain why the electric potential decreases from A to B. [2]
(b) Draw, on the axes, the variation of electric potential V with distance r from the centre of the
sphere.
R
[2]
(c(i)) Calculate the electric potential difference between points A and B. [1]
(c(ii)) Determine the charge Q of the sphere. [2]
(d) The concept of potential is also used in the context of gravitational fields. Suggest why scientists
developed a common terminology to describe different types of fields. [1]
3.) The graph shows how current I varies with potential difference V across a component X.
904
80-
70-
60-
50-
I/MA
40-
30-
20-
10-
0+
0
0.5
1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0
VIV
Component X and a cell of negligible internal resistance are placed in a circuit.
A variable resistor R is connected in series with component X. The ammeter reads 20mA.
4.0V
4.0V
Component X and the cell are now placed in a potential divider circuit.
(a) Outline why component X is considered non-ohmic. [1]
(b(i)) Determine the resistance of the variable resistor. [3]
(b(ii)) Calculate the power dissipated in the circuit. [1]
(c(i)) State the range of current that the ammeter can measure as the slider S of the potential divider
is moved from Q to P. [1]
(c(ii)) Describe, by reference to your answer for (c)(i), the advantage of the potential divider
arrangement over the arrangement in (b).
1.) Two long parallel current-carrying wires P and Q are separated by 0.10 m. The current in wire P is 5.0 A.
The magnetic force on a length of 0.50 m of wire P due to the current in wire Q is 2.0 × 10-s N.
(a) State and explain the magnitude of the force on a length of 0.50 m of wire Q due to the current in P. [2]
(b) Calculate the current in wire Q. [2]
(c) Another current-carrying wire R is placed parallel to wires P and Q and halfway between them as shown.
wire P
wire R
wire Q
0.05 m
0.05 m
The net magnetic force on wire Q is now zero.
(c.i) State the direction of the current in R, relative to the current in P.[1]
(c.ii) Deduce the current in R. [2]
Chapter 20 Solutions
FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICS,AP ED.
Ch. 20 - Point i in Fig. 20-19 represents the initial state...Ch. 20 - In lour experiments, blocks A and B, starting ill...Ch. 20 - A gas, confined to an insulated cylinder, is...Ch. 20 - An ideal monatomic gas at initial temperature T0...Ch. 20 - In four experiments, 2.5 mol of hydrogen gas...Ch. 20 - A box contains 100 atoms in a configuration that...Ch. 20 - Does the entropy per cycle increase, decrease, or...Ch. 20 - Three Carnot engines operate between temperature...Ch. 20 - An inventor claims to have invented four engines,...Ch. 20 - Does the entropy per cycle increase, decrease, or...
Ch. 20 - SSM Suppose 4.00 mol of an ideal gas undergoes a...Ch. 20 - Prob. 2PCh. 20 - ILW A 2.50 mol sample of an ideal gas expands...Ch. 20 - Prob. 4PCh. 20 - ILW Find a the energy absorbed as heat and b the...Ch. 20 - a What is the entropy change of a 12.0 g ice cube...Ch. 20 - ILW A 50.0 g block of copper whose temperature is...Ch. 20 - At very low temperatures, the molar specific heat...Ch. 20 - A 10 g ice cube at 10oC is placed in a lake whose...Ch. 20 - A 364 g block is put in contact with a thermal...Ch. 20 - SSM WWW In an experiment, 200 g of aluminum with a...Ch. 20 - A gas sample undergoes a reversible isothermal...Ch. 20 - In the irreversible process of Fig. 20-5, let the...Ch. 20 - Prob. 14PCh. 20 - A mixture of 1773 g of water and 227 g of ice is...Ch. 20 - GO An 8.0 g ice cube at -10C is put into a Thermos...Ch. 20 - Prob. 17PCh. 20 - GO A 2.0 mol sample of an ideal monatomic gas...Ch. 20 - Suppose 1.00 mol of a monatomic ideal gas is taken...Ch. 20 - Expand 1.00 mol of an monatomic gas initially at...Ch. 20 - GO Energy can be removed from water as heat at and...Ch. 20 - GO An insulated Thermos contains 130 g of water at...Ch. 20 - A Carnot engine whose low-temperature reservoir is...Ch. 20 - A Carnot engine absorbs 52 kJ as heat and exhausts...Ch. 20 - A Carnot engine has an efficiency of 22.0. It...Ch. 20 - In a hypothetical nuclear fusion reactor, the fuel...Ch. 20 - SSM WWW A Carnot engine operates between 235C and...Ch. 20 - In the first stage of a two-stage Carnot engine,...Ch. 20 - GO Figure 20-27 shows a reversible cycle through...Ch. 20 - A 500 W Carnot engine operates between...Ch. 20 - The efficiency of a particular car engine is 25...Ch. 20 - GO A Carnot engine is set up to produce a certain...Ch. 20 - SSM ILW Figure 20-29 shows a reversible cycle...Ch. 20 - GO An ideal gas 1.0 mol is the working substance...Ch. 20 - The cycle in Fig. 20-31 represents the operation...Ch. 20 - How much work must be done by a Carnot...Ch. 20 - SSM A heat pump is used to heal a building, The...Ch. 20 - The electric motor of a heat pump transfers energy...Ch. 20 - SSM A Carnot air conditioner lakes energy from the...Ch. 20 - To make ice, a freezer that is a reverse Carnot...Ch. 20 - ILW An air conditioner operating between 93F and...Ch. 20 - The motor in a refrigerator has a power of 200 W....Ch. 20 - GO Figure 20-32 represents a Carnot engine that...Ch. 20 - a During each cycle, a Carnot engine absorbs 750 J...Ch. 20 - Prob. 45PCh. 20 - A box contains N identical gas molecules equally...Ch. 20 - SSM WWW A box contains N gas molecules, Consider...Ch. 20 - Four particles are in the insulated box of Fig....Ch. 20 - A cylindrical copper rod of length 1.50 m and...Ch. 20 - Suppose 0.550 mol of an ideal gas is isothermally...Ch. 20 - Prob. 51PCh. 20 - Suppose 1.0 mol of a monatomic ideal gas initially...Ch. 20 - GO Suppose that a deep shaft were drilled in...Ch. 20 - What is the entropy change for 3.20 mol of an...Ch. 20 - A 600 g lump of copper at 80.0C is placed in 70.0...Ch. 20 - Figure 20-33 gives the force magnitude F versus...Ch. 20 - The temperature of 1.00 mol of a monatomic ideal...Ch. 20 - Repeat Problem 57, with the pressure now kept...Ch. 20 - Prob. 59PCh. 20 - A three-step cycle is undergone by 3.4 mol of an...Ch. 20 - An inventor has built an engine X and claims that...Ch. 20 - Suppose 2.00 mol of a diatomic gas is taken...Ch. 20 - A three-step cycle is undergone reversibly by 4.00...Ch. 20 - a A Carnot engine operates between a hot reservoir...Ch. 20 - A 2.00 mol diatomic gas initially at 300 K...Ch. 20 - An ideal refrigerator does 150 J of work to remove...Ch. 20 - Suppose that 260 J is conducted from a...Ch. 20 - An apparatus that liquefies helium is in a room...Ch. 20 - GO A brass rod is in thermal contact with a...Ch. 20 - A 45.0 g block of tungsten at 30.0C and a 25.0 g...Ch. 20 - Prob. 71PCh. 20 - Calculate the efficiency of a fossil-fuel power...Ch. 20 - SSM A Carnot refrigerator extracts 35.0 kJ as heat...Ch. 20 - A Carnot engine whose high-temperature reservoir...Ch. 20 - SSM System A of three particles and system B of...Ch. 20 - Figure 20-36 shows a Carnot cycle on a T-S...Ch. 20 - Find the relation between the efficiency of a...Ch. 20 - A Carnot engine has a power of 500 W. It operates...Ch. 20 - In a real refrigerator, the low-temperature coils...
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