Problem 1E A friend said the temperature inside a particular oven is 500 and the temperature inside a particular star is 50,000. You’re unsure whether your friend meant Celsius degrees or kelvins. How much difference does it make in each case?
Read more- Physics / Conceptual Physics 12 / Chapter 18 / Problem 13RQ
Table of Contents
Textbook Solutions for Conceptual Physics
Question
If work is done ?on a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease? If work is done ?by? a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease?
Solution
We have equation of first law of thermodynamics du=dW+dQ Where du is change in internal energy dw is change in work done dq is chan
full solution
If work is done on a system, does the internal energy of
Chapter 18 textbook questions
-
Chapter 18: Problem 1 Conceptual Physics 12
-
Chapter 18: Problem 1 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 1P What is the ideal efficiency of an automobile engine in which fuel is heated to 2700 K and the outdoor air is 270 K?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 1 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 1RQ What is the origin and meaning of the word ?thermodynamics??
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 2 Conceptual Physics 12
The temperature of the Sun’s interior is about \(10^{7}\) degrees. Does it matter whether this is degrees Celsius or kelvins? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 2 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 2P Consider an ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) power plant that operates on a temperature difference between deep 4°C water and 25°C surface water. Show that the Carnot efficiency of this plant is 7%.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 2 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 2RQ Is the study of thermodynamics concerned primarily with microscopic processes or with macroscopic ones?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 3 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 3E When heat flows from a warm object in contact with a cool object, do both objects undergo the same amount of temperature change?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 3 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 3P On a chilly 10°C day, your friend who loves cold weather says she wishes it were twice as cold. Taking this literally, show that the temperature she wishes for would be ?131.5°C.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 3 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 3RQ By how much does the volume of gas at 0°C contract for each decrease in temperature of 1 Celsius degree when the pressure is held constant?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 4 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 4E Heat always flows spontaneously from an object with a higher temperature to an object with a lower temperature. Is this the same thing as saying that heat always flows from an object with a greater internal energy to one with a lower internal energy? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 4 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 4P Imagine a giant dry-cleaners bag full of air at a temperature of ?35°C floating like a balloon with a string hanging from it 10 km above the ground. Estimate what its temperature would be if you were able to yank it suddenly back to Earth’s surface.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 4 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 4RQ By how much does the pressure of gas at 0°C decrease for each decrease in temperature of 1 Celsius degree when the volume is held constant?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 5 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 5P Calculate the ideal efficiency of an engine wherein fuel is heated to 2700 K and the surrounding air is 300 K.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 5 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 5RQ If we assume the gas does not condense to a liquid, what volume is approached for a gas at 0°C cooled by 273 Celsius degrees?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 6 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 6E If you vigorously shake a can of chicken broth back and forth for more than a minute, will the temperature of the broth increase? (Try it and see.)
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 6 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 6RQ What is the lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale? On the Kelvin scale?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 7 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 7E When air is quickly compressed, why does its temperature increase?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 7 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 7P A power station with an efficiency of 0.4 generates 108 W of electric power and dissipates 1.5 × 108 J of heat energy each second to the cooling water that flows through it, which increases its temperature by 3 Celsius degrees. Knowing that the specific heat of water in SI units is 4184 J/kg·°C, show that 12,000 kg of warmed water flows through the plant each second.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 7 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 7RQ What else besides molecular kinetic energy contributes to the internal energy of a substance?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 8 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 8E Suppose you do 100 J of work in compressing a gas. If 80 J of heat escapes in the process, what is the change in internal energy of the gas?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 8 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 8P Construct a table of all the possible combinations of numbers that can come up when you throw two dice. Your friend says, “Yes, I know that 7 is the most likely total number when two dice are thrown. But ?why 7?” Based on your table, answer your friend, and explain that, in thermodynamics, the situations that are likely to be observed are those that can be formed in the greatest number of ways.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 8 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 8RQ Is the principal concern in the study of thermodynamics the ?amount of internal energy in a system or the ?changes? in internal energy in a substance?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 9 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 9E Why does the bottom of a tire pump feel hot when you pump air in the tire, but when air is released, the valve stem feels cool?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 9 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 9RQ How does the law of the conservation of energy relate to the first law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 10 Conceptual Physics 12
When you blow up a balloon, do you slightly warm the balloon? When air is allowed to rush out of it, how, if at all, does the temperature of that expanding air change?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 10 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 10RQ What is the relationship between heat added to a system, change in its internal energy, and external work done by the system?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 11 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 11E What happens to the gas pressure within a sealed gallon can when it is heated? When it is cooled? Why?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 11 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 11RQ What happens to the internal energy of a system when mechanical work is done on it? What happens to its temperature?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 12 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 12E Is it possible to wholly convert a given amount of mechanical energy into thermal energy? Is it possible to wholly convert a given amount of thermal energy into mechanical energy? Cite examples to illustrate your answers.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 12 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 12RQ What condition is necessary for a process to be adiabatic?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 13 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 13E Why does cold mountain air become warm when it descends into a valley?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 13 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 13RQ If work is done ?on a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease? If work is done ?by? a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 14 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 14E Everybody knows that warm air rises. So it might seem that the air temperature should be higher at the tops of mountains than clown below. But the opposite is most often the case. Why?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 14 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 14RQ How do meteorologists express the first law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 15 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 15E What is the ultimate source of energy in coal, oil, and wood? Why do we call energy from wood renewable but energy from coal and oil nonrenewable?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 16 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 16E What is the ultimate source of energy in a hydroelectric power plant?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 15 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 15RQ What is the adiabatic form of the first law?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 16 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 16RQ What generally happens to the temperature of rising air? Of sinking air?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 17 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 17E The combined molecular kinetic energies of molecules in a cool lake are greater than the combined molecular kinetic energies of molecules in a cup of hot tea. Pretend you partially immerse the teacup in the lake and that the tea ?absorbs? 10 calories from the water and becomes hotter, while the water that gives up 10 calories becomes cooler. Would this energy transfer violate the first law of thermodynamics? The second law of thermodynamics? Defend your answers.
Read more -
-
Chapter 18: Problem 18 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 18E Why is thermal pollution a relative term?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 18 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 18RQ Do adiabatic processes apply only to gases? Defend your answer.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 19 Conceptual Physics 12
The box “Thermodynamics Dramatized” shows the crushing of an inverted steam-filled can placed in a pan of water. Would the water need to be cold? Would crushing occur if the water were hot but not boiling? Would it crush in boiling water? (Try it and see!)
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 19 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 19RQ How does the second law of thermodynamics relate to the direction of heat flow?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 20 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 20E Why is it advantageous to use steam that is as hot as possible in a steam-driven turbine?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 20 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 20RQ What three processes occur in every heat engine?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 21 Conceptual Physics 12
How does the ideal efficiency of an automobile relate to the temperature of the engine and the temperature of the environment in which it operates? Be specific.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 21 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 21RQ What exactly is thermal pollution?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 22 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 22E What happens to the efficiency of a heat engine when the temperature of the reservoir into which thermal energy is transferred is lowered?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 22 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 22RQ How does the second law relate to heat engines?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 23 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 23RQ Why is the condensation part of the cycle in a steam turbine so essential?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 23 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 23E Under what conditions would a heat engine be 100% efficient?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 24 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 24E To increase the efficiency of a heat engine, would it be preferable to produce the same temperature increment by increasing the temperature of the reservoir while maintaining the temperature of the sink constant, or to decrease the temperature of the sink while maintaining the temperature of the reservoir constant? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 24 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 24RQ Distinguish between high-quality energy and low-quality energy in terms of organized and disorganized energy. Give an example of each.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 25 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 25E Could you cool a kitchen by leaving the refrigerator door open and closing the kitchen door and windows? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 25 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 25RQ How can the second law be stated with regard to high-quality and lower-quality energy?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 26 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 26E Could you warm a kitchen by leaving the door of a hot oven open? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 26 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 26RQ With respect to orderly and disorderly states, what do natural systems tend to do? Can a disorderly state ever transform to an orderly state? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 27 Conceptual Physics 12
An electric fan not only doesn’t decrease the temperature of air, but it actually increases air temperature. How, then, are you cooled by a fan on a hot day?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 27 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 27RQ What is the physicist’s term f? easure of amount of disorder?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 28 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 28E Strictly speaking, why will a refrigerator containing a fixed amount of food consume more energy in a warm room than in a cold room?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 29 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 29E A refrigerator moves heat from cold to warm. Why does this not violate the second law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 30 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 30E What happens to the density of a quantity of gas when its temperature is decreased and its pressure is held constant?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 31 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 31E If you squeeze an air-filled balloon and no heat escapes, what happens to the internal energy of the gas in the balloon?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 32 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 32E In buildings that are being electrically heated, is it at all wasteful to turn all the lights on? Is turning all the lights on wasteful if the building is being cooled by air- conditioning?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 28 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 28RQ Distinguish between the first and second laws of thermodynamics in terms of whether or not exceptions occur.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 37 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 37E According to the second law of thermodynamics, is the universe moving to a more ordered state or to a more disordered state?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 35 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 35E Molecules in the combustion chamber of a rocket engine are in a high state of random motion. When the molecules are expelled through a nozzle in a more ordered state, will their temperature be more, less, or the same as their initial temperature in the chamber before being exhausted?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 34 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 34E Defend the statement that 100% of the electrical energy that goes into lighting a lamp is converted to thermal energy. Are the first and the second laws of thermodynamics violated?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 38 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 38E Do adiabatic parcels occur in the atmosphere, in the ocean, or in both?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 33 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 33E Why can the drinking bird in Figure 17.4 in the previous chapter be considered a heat engine?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 39 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 39E The ocean possesses enormous numbers of molecules, all with kinetic energy. Can this energy be extracted and used as a power source? Defend your answer.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 40 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 40E Why do we say a substance in a liquid phase is more disordered than the same substance in a solid phase?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 42 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 42E Water evaporates from a salt solution and leaves behind salt crystals that have a higher degree of molecular order than the more randomly moving molecules in the saltwater. Has the entropy principle been violated? Why or why not?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 41 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 41E Comment on this statement: The second law of thermodynamics is one of the most fundamental laws of nature, yet it is not an exact law at all.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 36 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 36E Is the total energy of the universe becoming more unavailable with time? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 43 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 43E Water put into the freezer compartment of your refrigerator goes to a state of less molecular disorder when it freezes. Is this an exception to the entropy principle? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 44 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 44E As a chicken develops from an egg, it becomes more ordered with time. Does this violate the principle of entropy? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 45 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 45E The United States Patent and Trademark Office rejects claims for perpetual motion machines (in which energy output is as great or greater than energy input) without even investigating them. Why is this?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 46 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 46E It is generally assumed that perpetual motion machines are impossible to construct. Is it inconsistent to say that molecules are in perpetual motion?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 47 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 47E A classmate says that all this stuff about no perpetual motion is bunk; that atoms, planets, stars, and everything are in perpetual motion. What distinction is being missed here?
Read more -
Chapter 18: Problem 48 Conceptual Physics 12
Problem 48E (a) If you spent 10 minutes repeatedly shaking and throwing down a pair of coins, would you expect to see two heads come up at least once? (b) If you spent an hour shaking a handful of 10 coins and throwing them down, would you expect to see all 10 come up heads at least once? (c) If you stirred a box of 10,000 coins and tossed them repeatedly on the floor all day long, would you expect to see all 10,000 appear as heads at least once?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 1 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the origin and meaning of the word thermodynamics?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 2 Conceptual Physics 12
Is the study of thermodynamics concerned primarily with microscopic processes or with macroscopic ones?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 3 Conceptual Physics 12
By how much does the volume of gas at \(0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) contract for each decrease in temperature of 1 Celsius degree when the pressure is held constant? Text Transcription: 0^circ C
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 4 Conceptual Physics 12
By how much does the pressure of gas at \(0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) decrease for each decrease in temperature of 1 Celsius degree when the volume is held constant? Text Transcription: 0^circ C
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 6 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the lowest possible temperature on the Celsius scale? On the Kelvin scale?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 5 Conceptual Physics 12
If we assume the gas does not condense to a liquid, what volume is approached for a gas at \(0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) cooled by 273 Celsius degrees? Text Transcription: 0^circ C
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 7 Conceptual Physics 12
Is the principal concern in the study of thermodynamics the amount of internal energy in a system or the changes in internal energy in a substance?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 8 Conceptual Physics 12
How does the law of the conservation of energy relate to the first law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
-
Chapter : Problem 11 Conceptual Physics 12
What happens to the internal energy of a system when mechanical work is done on it? What happens to its temperature?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 10 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the relationship among heat added to a system, change in the system’s internal energy, and external work done by the system?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 12 Conceptual Physics 12
What condition is necessary for a process to be adiabatic?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 13 Conceptual Physics 12
If work is done on a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease? If work is done by a system, does the internal energy of the system increase or decrease?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 14 Conceptual Physics 12
How do meteorologists express the first law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
-
Chapter : Problem 16 Conceptual Physics 12
What generally happens to the temperature of rising air? Of sinking air?
Read more -
-
Chapter : Problem 18 Conceptual Physics 12
Do adiabatic processes apply only to gases? Defend your answer.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 19 Conceptual Physics 12
How does the second law of thermodynamics relate to the direction of heat flow?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 20 Conceptual Physics 12
What three processes occur in every heat engine?
Read more -
-
Chapter : Problem 22 Conceptual Physics 12
How does the second law relate to heat engines?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 23 Conceptual Physics 12
Why is the condensation part of the cycle in a steam turbine so essential?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 24 Conceptual Physics 12
Distinguish between high-quality energy and low-quality energy in terms of organized and disorganized energy. Give an example of each.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 25 Conceptual Physics 12
How can the second law be stated with regard to high-quality and lower-quality energy?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 26 Conceptual Physics 12
With respect to orderly and disorderly states, what do natural systems tend to do? Can a disorderly state ever transform into an orderly state? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 27 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the physicist’s term for measure of amount of disorder?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 28 Conceptual Physics 12
Distinguish between the first and second laws of thermodynamics in terms of whether or not exceptions occur.
Read more -
-
-
Chapter : Problem 33 Conceptual Physics 12
\(\text { Ideal efficiency }=\frac{\mathbf{T}_{\text {hot }}-\mathrm{T}_{\text {cold }}}{\mathrm{T}_{\text {hot }}}\) Show that the ideal efficiency is 90% for an engine in which fuel is heated to 3000 K and the surrounding air is 300 K.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 34 Conceptual Physics 12
\(\text { Ideal efficiency }=\frac{\mathbf{T}_{\text {hot }}-\mathbf{T}_{\text {cold }}}{\mathbf{T}_{\text {hot }}}\) Calculate the ideal efficiency of an engine in which fuel is heated to 2700 K and the surrounding air is 200 K.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 35 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the ideal efficiency of an automobile engine that operates between the temperatures \(600^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) and \(320^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\)? (Why is your answer not 47%?)
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 37 Conceptual Physics 12
On a chilly \(10^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) day, your friend who loves cold weather says she wishes it were twice as cold. Taking this literally, show that the temperature she wishes for would be \(-131.5^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\).
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 36 Conceptual Physics 12
Consider an ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) power plant that operates on a temperature difference between deep \(4^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) water and \(25^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) surface water. Show that the Carnot efficiency of this plant is 7%.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 38 Conceptual Physics 12
Imagine a giant dry-cleaner’s bag full of air at a temperature of \(-35^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) floating like a balloon with a string hanging from it 10 km above the ground. Estimate what its temperature would be if you were able to yank it suddenly back to Earth’s surface.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 39 Conceptual Physics 12
Wally Whacko claims to have invented a heat engine that will revolutionize industry. It runs between a hot source at \(300^\circ\)C and a cold sink at \(25^\circ\)C. He claims that his engine is 92% efficient. a. What error did he make in his choice of temperature scales? b. What is the actual maximum efficiency of his engine?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 40 Conceptual Physics 12
A power station with an efficiency of 0.4 generates \(10^{8} \quad \mathrm{W}\) of electric power and dissipates \(1.5 \times 10^{8} \quad \mathrm{J}\) of heat energy each second to the cooling water that flows through it, which increases its temperature by 3 Celsius degrees. Knowing that the specific heat of water in SI units is \(4184 \quad \mathrm{J} / \mathrm{kg} \cdot{ }^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\), show that 12,000 kg of warmed water flows through the plant each second. Text Transcription: 10^8 W 1.5 times 10^8 J 4184 J / kg cdot ^circ C
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 42 Conceptual Physics 12
Construct a table of all the possible combinations of numbers that can come up when you throw two dice. Your friend says, “Yes, I know that 7 is the most likely total number when two dice are thrown. But why 7?” Based on your table, answer your friend, and explain that, in thermodynamics, the situations that are likely to be observed are those that can be formed in the greatest number of ways.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 41 Conceptual Physics 12
Consider a 6.0-g steel nail 8.0 cm long and a hammer that exerts an average force of 600 N on the nail when it is being driven into a piece of wood. The nail becomes warmer. Show that the increase in the nail’s temperature is \(17.8^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\). (Assume that the specific heat capacity of steel is \(450 \quad \mathrm{J} / \mathrm{kg} \cdot{ }^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\).) Text Transcription: 17.8^circ C 450 J / kg cdot ^circ C
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 43 Conceptual Physics 12
A friend said the temperature inside a particular oven is 500 and the temperature inside a particular star is 50,000. You’re unsure whether your friend meant Celsius degrees or kelvins. How much difference does it make in each case?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 44 Conceptual Physics 12
The temperature of the Sun’s interior is about \(10^{7}\) degrees. Does it matter whether this is degrees Celsius or kelvins? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 45 Conceptual Physics 12
When heat flows from a warm object in contact with a cool object, do both objects undergo the same amount of temperature change?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 47 Conceptual Physics 12
If you vigorously shake a can of chicken broth for more than a minute, will the temperature of the broth increase? (Try it and see.)
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 48 Conceptual Physics 12
When air is quickly compressed, why does its temperature increase?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 49 Conceptual Physics 12
Suppose you do 100 J of work in compressing a gas. If 80 J of heat escapes in the process, what is the change in the internal energy of the gas?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 50 Conceptual Physics 12
Why does the bottom of a tire pump feel hot when you pump air in the tire, but when air is released, the valve stem feels cool?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 51 Conceptual Physics 12
When you blow up a balloon, do you slightly warm the balloon? When air is allowed to rush out of it, how, if at all, does the temperature of that expanding air change?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 52 Conceptual Physics 12
What happens to the gas pressure in a sealed gallon can when it is heated? When it is cooled? Why?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 53 Conceptual Physics 12
Why does cold mountain air become warm when it descends into a valley?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 54 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the ultimate source of energy in coal, oil, and wood? Why do we call energy from wood renewable but energy from coal and oil nonrenewable?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 55 Conceptual Physics 12
What is the ultimate source of energy in a hydroelectric power plant?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 57 Conceptual Physics 12
How does the ideal efficiency of an automobile relate to the temperature of the engine and the temperature of the environment in which it operates? Be specific.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 58 Conceptual Physics 12
What happens to the efficiency of a heat engine when the temperature of the reservoir into which thermal energy is transferred is lowered?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 59 Conceptual Physics 12
Under what conditions would a heat engine be 100% efficient?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 60 Conceptual Physics 12
To increase the efficiency of a heat engine, would it be preferable to produce the same temperature increment by increasing the temperature of the reservoir while maintaining the temperature of the sink constant, or to decrease the temperature of the sink while maintaining the temperature of the reservoir constant? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 61 Conceptual Physics 12
Could you cool a kitchen by leaving the refrigerator door open and closing the kitchen door and windows? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 62 Conceptual Physics 12
Could you warm a kitchen by leaving the door of a hot oven open? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 63 Conceptual Physics 12
An electric fan not only doesn’t decrease the temperature of air but actually increases the air temperature. How, then, are you cooled by a fan on a hot day?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 64 Conceptual Physics 12
Strictly speaking, why will a refrigerator that contains a fixed amount of food consume more energy in a warm room than in a cold room?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 65 Conceptual Physics 12
A refrigerator moves heat from cold to warm. Why doesn’t this violate the second law of thermodynamics?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 66 Conceptual Physics 12
What happens to the density of a quantity of gas when its temperature is decreased and its pressure is held constant?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 67 Conceptual Physics 12
If you squeeze an air-filled balloon and no heat escapes, what happens to the internal energy of the gas in the balloon?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 68 Conceptual Physics 12
In buildings that are being electrically heated, is it at all wasteful to turn all the lights on? Is turning all the lights on wasteful if the building is being cooled by air conditioning?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 69 Conceptual Physics 12
Why can the drinking bird in Figure 17.4 in Chapter 17 be considered a heat engine?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 70 Conceptual Physics 12
Molecules in the combustion chamber of a rocket engine are in a high state of random motion. When the molecules are expelled through a nozzle in a more ordered state, will their temperature be higher than, lower than, or the same as their initial temperature in the chamber before being exhausted?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 71 Conceptual Physics 12
Is the total energy of the universe becoming more unavailable with time? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 72 Conceptual Physics 12
According to the second law of thermodynamics, is the universe moving to a more ordered state or to a more disordered state?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 74 Conceptual Physics 12
The ocean possesses enormous numbers of molecules, all with kinetic energy. Can this energy be extracted and used as a power source? Defend your answer.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 73 Conceptual Physics 12
Do adiabatic parcels occur in the atmosphere, in the ocean, or in both?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 75 Conceptual Physics 12
Why do we say a substance in a liquid phase is more disordered than the same substance in a solid phase?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 76 Conceptual Physics 12
Water evaporates from a salt solution and leaves behind salt crystals that have a higher degree of molecular order than the more randomly moving molecules in the saltwater. Has the entropy principle been violated? Why or why not?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 77 Conceptual Physics 12
Water put into the freezer compartment of your refrigerator goes to a state of less molecular disorder when it freezes. Is this an exception to the entropy principle? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 78 Conceptual Physics 12
As a chicken develops from an egg, it becomes more ordered with time. Does this violate the principle of entropy? Explain.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 79 Conceptual Physics 12
The United States Patent and Trademark Office rejects claims for perpetual motion machines (in which energy output is as great as or greater than energy input) without even investigating them. Why is this?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 80 Conceptual Physics 12
Discuss whether or not it is possible to wholly convert a given amount of mechanical energy into thermal energy. Is it possible to wholly convert a given amount of thermal energy into mechanical energy? Cite examples to illustrate your answers.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 81 Conceptual Physics 12
Heat always flows spontaneously from an object with a higher temperature to an object with a lower temperature. Is this the same as saying that heat always flows from an object with greater internal energy to one with less internal energy? Discuss why or why not.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 82 Conceptual Physics 12
Everybody knows that warm air rises. So it might seem that the air temperature should be higher at the tops of mountains than down below. Discuss why the opposite is most often the case.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 83 Conceptual Physics 12
Hovering over the surface of our skin is a layer of air some 3 millimeters in thickness that acts as a thermal blanket. On a hot day, what effect does a breeze on bare skin have on your skin? What effect does it have on a cold day?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 85 Conceptual Physics 12
The temperature in Boston was \(40^{\circ} \mathrm{F}\) when it was \(80^{\circ} \mathrm{F}\) in St. Petersburg, FL. What is your response to a friend who suggests that it was twice as hot in St. Petersburg on that day? Text Transcription: 40^circ F 80^circ F
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 86 Conceptual Physics 12
The combined molecular kinetic energies of molecules in a cool lake are greater than the combined molecular kinetic energies of molecules in a cup of hot tea. Pretend you partially immerse the teacup in the lake and the tea absorbs 10 calories from the water and becomes hotter, while the water that gives up 10 calories becomes cooler. Would this energy transfer violate the first law of thermodynamics? The second law of thermodynamics? Discuss your answers.
Read more -
-
Chapter : Problem 88 Conceptual Physics 12
The Thermodynamics Dramatized! box shows the crushing of an inverted steam-filled can placed in a pan of water. Does the water need to be cold? Would crushing occur if the water were hot but not boiling? Would the can crush in boiling water? Discuss this, and then try it and see!
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 89 Conceptual Physics 12
Defend the statement that 100% of the electric energy that goes into lighting a lamp is converted to thermal energy. Are the first and the second laws of thermodynamics violated?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 90 Conceptual Physics 12
Discuss this statement: The second law of thermodynamics is one of the most fundamental laws of nature, yet it is not an exact law at all. Why not?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 92 Conceptual Physics 12
A classmate says that all this stuff about no perpetual motion is bunk; that atoms, planets, stars, and everything are in perpetual motion. What distinction is being missed here?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 91 Conceptual Physics 12
It is generally assumed that perpetual motion machines are impossible to construct. Is it inconsistent to say that molecules are in perpetual motion?
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 93 Conceptual Physics 12
(a) If you spent 10 minutes repeatedly shaking and throwing down a pair of coins, would you expect to see two heads come up at least once? (b) If you spent an hour shaking a handful of 10 coins and throwing them down, would you expect to see all 10 come up heads at least once? (c) If you stirred a box of 10,000 coins and tossed them repeatedly on the floor all day long, would you expect to see all 10,000 appear as heads at least once? Discuss.
Read more -
Chapter : Problem 56 Conceptual Physics 12
Why is it advantageous to use steam that is as hot as possible in a steam-driven turbine?
Read more