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EBK STUDENT SOLUTIONS MANUAL WITH STUDY
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781337520379
Author: Vuille
Publisher: YUZU
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Chapter 3, Problem 2P
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A cylinder with a piston contains 0.153 mol of
nitrogen at a pressure of 1.83×105 Pa and a
temperature of 290 K. The nitrogen may be
treated as an ideal gas. The gas is first compressed
isobarically to half its original volume. It then
expands adiabatically back to its original volume,
and finally it is heated isochorically to its original
pressure.
Part A
Compute the temperature at the beginning of the adiabatic expansion.
Express your answer in kelvins.
ΕΠΙ ΑΣΦ
T₁ =
?
K
Submit
Request Answer
Part B
Compute the temperature at the end of the adiabatic expansion.
Express your answer in kelvins.
Π ΑΣΦ
T₂ =
Submit
Request Answer
Part C
Compute the minimum pressure.
Express your answer in pascals.
ΕΠΙ ΑΣΦ
P =
Submit
Request Answer
?
?
K
Pa
Learning Goal:
To understand the meaning and the basic applications of
pV diagrams for an ideal gas.
As you know, the parameters of an ideal gas are
described by the equation
pV = nRT,
where p is the pressure of the gas, V is the volume of
the gas, n is the number of moles, R is the universal gas
constant, and T is the absolute temperature of the gas. It
follows that, for a portion of an ideal gas,
pV
= constant.
Τ
One can see that, if the amount of gas remains constant,
it is impossible to change just one parameter of the gas:
At least one more parameter would also change. For
instance, if the pressure of the gas is changed, we can
be sure that either the volume or the temperature of the
gas (or, maybe, both!) would also change.
To explore these changes, it is often convenient to draw a
graph showing one parameter as a function of the other.
Although there are many choices of axes, the most
common one is a plot of pressure as a function of
volume: a pV diagram.
In this problem, you…
Learning Goal:
To understand the meaning and the basic applications of
pV diagrams for an ideal gas.
As you know, the parameters of an ideal gas are
described by the equation
pV = nRT,
where p is the pressure of the gas, V is the volume of
the gas, n is the number of moles, R is the universal gas
constant, and T is the absolute temperature of the gas. It
follows that, for a portion of an ideal gas,
pV
= constant.
T
One can see that, if the amount of gas remains constant,
it is impossible to change just one parameter of the gas:
At least one more parameter would also change. For
instance, if the pressure of the gas is changed, we can
be sure that either the volume or the temperature of the
gas (or, maybe, both!) would also change.
To explore these changes, it is often convenient to draw a
graph showing one parameter as a function of the other.
Although there are many choices of axes, the most
common one is a plot of pressure as a function of
volume: a pV diagram.
In this problem, you…
Chapter 3 Solutions
EBK STUDENT SOLUTIONS MANUAL WITH STUDY
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A student...Ch. 3 - This is a symbolic version of Problem 29. A river...Ch. 3 - An airplane maintains a speed of 630 km/h relative...Ch. 3 - A moving walkway at an airport has a speed v1 and...Ch. 3 - How long does it take ail automobile traveling in...Ch. 3 - You can use any coordinate system you like to...Ch. 3 - A Nordic jumper goes off a ski jump at an angle of...Ch. 3 - In a local diner, a customer slides an empty...Ch. 3 - Towns A and B in Figure P3.35 are 80.0 km apart. A...Ch. 3 - A chinook salmon has a maximum underwater speed of...Ch. 3 - A rocket is launched at an angle of 53.0 above the...Ch. 3 - Two canoeists in identical canoes exert the same...Ch. 3 - (a) If a person can jump a maximum horizontal...Ch. 3 - A farm truck travels due east with a constant...Ch. 3 - A home run is hit in such a way that the baseball...Ch. 3 - A ball is thrown straight upward and returns to...Ch. 3 - A quarterback throws a football toward a receiver...Ch. 3 - A 2.00-m-tall basketball player is standing on the...Ch. 3 - In a very popular lecture demonstration, a...Ch. 3 - Figure P3.60 illustrates the difference in...Ch. 3 - By throwing a ball at an angle of 45, a girl can...Ch. 3 - The equation of a parabola is y = ax2 + bx + c,...Ch. 3 - A hunter wishes to cross a river that is 1.5 km...Ch. 3 - When baseball outfielders throw the ball, they...Ch. 3 - A daredevil is shot out of a cannon at 45.0 to the...Ch. 3 - Chinook salmon are able to move upstream faster by...Ch. 3 - A student derides to measure the muzzle velocity...Ch. 3 - A golf ball with an initial speed of 50.0 m/s...Ch. 3 - A landscape architect is planning an artificial...Ch. 3 - One strategy in a snowball fight is to throw a...Ch. 3 - A dart gun is fired while being held horizontally...Ch. 3 - The determined Wile E. Coyote is out once more to...Ch. 3 - A truck loaded with cannonball watermelons stops...
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