Fundamentals of Physics Extended
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781118230725
Author: David Halliday, Robert Resnick, Jearl Walker
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 20, Problem 68P
An apparatus that liquefies helium is in a room maintained at 300 K. If the helium in the apparatus is at 4.0 K, what is the minimum ratio Qto/Qfrom, where Qto is the energy delivered as heat to the room and Qfrom is the energy removed as heat from the helium?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
28. QC S Review. Figure P1.28 shows students studying the thermal conduction of energy into
cylindrical blocks of ice. As we will see in Chapter 19, this process is described by the equation
km²(Th – T.)
Q
At
4L
For experimental control, in one set of trials all quantities except d and At are constant.
(a) If d is made three times larger, does the equation predict that At will get larger or get smaller?
By what factor?
(b) What pattern of proportionality of At to d does the equation predict?
(c) To display this proportionality as a straight line on a graph, what quantities should you plot
on the horizontal and vertical axes?
(d) What expression represents the theoretical slope of this graph?
Heat flows through a pipe wall, with a radius in Ri
and outer radius Ro. The length of the pipe is L. The thermal conductivity of the pipe
material is proportional to the temperature squared in the form:
k=aT²+b
a. Derive the equation for the pipe wall temperature profile,
b. Calculate the heat loss through the pipe wall.
An energetic athlete can use up all the energy from a diet of 4000 Cal/day. If he were to use up this energy at a steady rate, what is the ratio of the rate of energy use compared to that of a 100 W bulb? (The power of 100 W is the rate at which the bulb converts electrical energy to heat and the energy of visible light.)
Chapter 20 Solutions
Fundamentals of Physics Extended
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 - An ideal gas undergoes a reversible isothermal...Ch. 20 - ILW A 2.50 mol sample of an ideal gas expands...Ch. 20 - How much energy must be transferred as heat for a...Ch. 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 - SSM A 0.600 kg sample of water is initially ice at...Ch. 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...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
A human female with Turner syndrome (47, X) also expresses the X-linked trait hemophilia, as did her father. Wh...
Concepts of Genetics (12th Edition)
WHAT IF? Most prairies experience regular fires, typically every few years. If these disturbances were relative...
Campbell Biology in Focus (2nd Edition)
8.63 Two flasks of equal volume and at the same temperature contain different gases. One flask contains 10.0 g ...
Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry (13th Edition)
Johnny was vigorously exercising the only joints in the skull that are freely movable. What would you guess he ...
Anatomy & Physiology (6th Edition)
8. A human maintaining a vegan diet (containing no animal products) would be a:
a. producer
b. primary consume...
Human Biology: Concepts and Current Issues (8th Edition)
Identify each of the following reproductive barriers as prezygotic or postzygotic. a. One lilac species lives o...
Campbell Essential Biology with Physiology (5th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- In general, the cooling of a hot steel bar can be described by the following differential equation: dT = a(T- 20) dt %3D where the surrounding room temperature is 20°C and a is a constant that describes how easily heat can transfer between the bar and the environment. Your steel bar has been heated to 200°C and will be allowed to cool from 200°C in such a way that the ODE describes its temperature. The coefficient 'a' describes how quickly heat is dissipated, and is affected by things like insulation or airflow around the bar. You wish to determine the value of 'a' required to allow the bar to cool down to below 30°C within 4 minutes, to the nearest two decimal places. Use a for loop to test all values of the 'a' coefficient between 0 and -1. Use an appropriately high resolution to ensure that your answer converges with the true answer. Answer:arrow_forwarda) The power of the immersion heater is 120 Watts. In 10 minutes, the reading falls from 482g to 474g. What is the specific latent heat of water? b) 5.7MJ of heat energy is supplied to 30kg of aluminium that is initially at a temperature of 20°C .If the specific heat capacity of aluminium is 950J/kg °C, determine its final temperature ?arrow_forwardAn electronics device generates 30.5 W of heat energy during normal operation. The heat is dissipated from the top surface of the device to ambient air at 23°C. If the top surface area is 0.158 m2 and the convection heat transfer coefficient is 7.838 W/m2. K, what will be the surface temperature (in °C) of the device [round your final answer to one decimal place]? Air, T. T 00 Sarrow_forward
- A solar panel receives energy from the Sun at a rate of 5.0 kW.Thermal energy is transferred from the solar panel to water with an efficiency of 20%.Coldwater of mass 15 kg enters the solar panel every hour.The specific heat capacity of water is 4200 J/(kg °C).Calculate the temperature increase of the water.arrow_forwardThermography is a technique for measuring radiant heat and detecting variations in surface temperatures that may be medically, environmentally, or militarily meaningful.(a) What is the percent increase in the rate of heat transfer by radiation from a given area at a temperature of 34.0ºC compared with that at 33.0ºC , such as on a person’s skin? (b) What is the percent increase in the rate of heat transfer by radiation from a given area at a temperature of 34.0ºC compared with that at 20.0ºC , such as for warm and cool automobile hoods?arrow_forwardThe power of an immersion heater is 50 kW. It is put into a boiling water. The heater remained switched on for 12 minutes. How much water (in kg) changes from liquid into gas. Latent specific heat of vaporization of water is 2.3x106 J/kg. Round off the answer to 2 decimal places.arrow_forward
- The heat equation in 1D is : du = Ở o = constant (a) Given that [t] = T and [x] = L, what is the dimension of o ? Infer a dimensionless variable z A x tª oß.arrow_forwardWater freezes at 0°C at atmospheric pressure (1.01×10° Pa). The densities of water and ice at this temperature and pressure are 1000kg / m and 934 kg / m respectively. The latent heat of fusion is 3.34x10° J/ kg . The pressure required for increasing the melting temperature of ice by 10°C is... GPa. (up to two decimal places)arrow_forwardRadioactive decay of elements in the earth’s interior results in a mean heat flux through the Earth’s surfaceof 5×10−2Wm−2. What is the flux expressed as a fraction of the energy flux due to thermal re-radiation of absorbed solar energy? If radioactive decay were the only heat source for the Earth, what would the Earth’s temperature be?arrow_forward
- Eggs with a mass of 0.15kg per egg and a constant pressure specific heat of 3.32 kJ/kg-K are cooled from 32C to 10C at the rate of 300 eggs per minute. Compute the rate of heat removal from these eggs in kW. FYI: kW = kilowatt = kJ/sarrow_forwardResearchers are conducting a study to quantity the thermal conductivity of a composite material. A square box is made from 1932 cm2 sheets of the composite insulating material that is 5.2 cm thick. A 125 W heater is placed inside the box. Sensors attached to the box show that the interior and exterior surfaces of one face have reached the constant temperatures of 71°C and 23°C. What is the thermal conductivity in W/m-K?arrow_forwardAn engineer is designing a cooling system for a chemical process that produces 52 kJ of heat every second. What minimum mass of water must be used each second to absorb the heat if the initial temperature of the water is 14.0 oC and the maximum temperature that the water can be released to the environment is 17.5 oC? The specific heat of water is .arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics (14th Edition)PhysicsISBN:9780133969290Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. FreedmanPublisher:PEARSONIntroduction To Quantum MechanicsPhysicsISBN:9781107189638Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Physics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningLecture- Tutorials for Introductory AstronomyPhysicsISBN:9780321820464Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina BrissendenPublisher:Addison-WesleyCollege Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...PhysicsISBN:9780134609034Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart FieldPublisher:PEARSON
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics (14th Edition)
Physics
ISBN:9780133969290
Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher:PEARSON
Introduction To Quantum Mechanics
Physics
ISBN:9781107189638
Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
Physics
ISBN:9780321820464
Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina Brissenden
Publisher:Addison-Wesley
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...
Physics
ISBN:9780134609034
Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart Field
Publisher:PEARSON
Thermodynamics: Crash Course Physics #23; Author: Crash Course;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4i1MUWJoI0U;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY