GO Suppose that a deep shaft were drilled in Earth's crust near one of the poles, where the surface temperature is –40°C, to a depth where the temperature is 800°C. (a) What is the theoretical limit to the efficiency of an engine operating between these temperatures? (b) If all the energy released as heat into the low- temperature reservoir were used to melt ice that was initially at –40°C, at what rate could liquid water at 0°C be produced by a 100 MW power plant (treat it as an engine)? The specific heat of ice is 2220 J/kg · K; water's heat of fusion is 333 kJ/kg. (Note that the engine can operate only between 0°C and 800°C in this case. Energy exhausted at –40°C cannot warm anything above –40°C.)
GO Suppose that a deep shaft were drilled in Earth's crust near one of the poles, where the surface temperature is –40°C, to a depth where the temperature is 800°C. (a) What is the theoretical limit to the efficiency of an engine operating between these temperatures? (b) If all the energy released as heat into the low- temperature reservoir were used to melt ice that was initially at –40°C, at what rate could liquid water at 0°C be produced by a 100 MW power plant (treat it as an engine)? The specific heat of ice is 2220 J/kg · K; water's heat of fusion is 333 kJ/kg. (Note that the engine can operate only between 0°C and 800°C in this case. Energy exhausted at –40°C cannot warm anything above –40°C.)
GO Suppose that a deep shaft were drilled in Earth's crust near one of the poles, where the surface temperature is –40°C, to a depth where the temperature is 800°C. (a) What is the theoretical limit to the efficiency of an engine operating between these temperatures? (b) If all the energy released as heat into the low- temperature reservoir were used to melt ice that was initially at –40°C, at what rate could liquid water at 0°C be produced by a 100 MW power plant (treat it as an engine)? The specific heat of ice is 2220 J/kg · K; water's heat of fusion is 333 kJ/kg. (Note that the engine can operate only between 0°C and 800°C in this case. Energy exhausted at –40°C cannot warm anything above –40°C.)
What is the resistance (in (2) of a 27.5 m long piece of 17 gauge copper wire having a 1.150 mm diameter?
0.445
ΧΩ
Find the ratio of the diameter of silver to iron wire, if they have the same resistance per unit length (as they might in household wiring).
d.
Ag
dFe
= 2.47
×
Find the ratio of the diameter of silver to iron wire, if they have the same resistance per unit length (as they might in household wiring).
d
Ag
= 2.51
dFe
×
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
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The Second Law of Thermodynamics: Heat Flow, Entropy, and Microstates; Author: Professor Dave Explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrwW4w2nAMc;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY