Consider the problem of hammering a nail into a board.  With due regard for your hand holding the nail, place its pointed tip on the wood and strike it  with a hammer.  If the wood is hard so  the nail does not go in easily, you will notice that the nail gets warm, especially after several strikes.    We can figure out how much its temperature will rise by connecting what we know about Newtonian mechanics with what we are learning about temperature and heat. A 16-penny nail  will have a mass of 10 g.  This is the sort of nail used to build walls in a house. Strike it with one strong  blow from a hammer with a mass of 0.5 kg (that's about 1 lb, so this is a good sized carpenter's hammer). Assume the impact velocity of the hammer on the head is 15 m/s and that it stops firmly at each blow. To make a reasonable assumption about the outcome, also assume that 75% of the energy of the hammer is converted into heat after the blow.   The specific heat of the steel in the nail is about 482 J kg-1 K-1  . What is the temperature increase in the nail if it does not lose heat rapidly to the wood when when it was hammered?

Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
5th Edition
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Chapter16: Temperature And The Kinetic Theory Of Gases
Section16.2: Thermometers And Temperature Scales
Problem 16.1QQ: Consider the following pairs of materials. Which pair represents two materials, one of which is...
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Consider the problem of hammering a nail into a board.  With due regard for your hand holding the nail, place its pointed tip on the wood and strike it  with a hammer.  If the wood is hard so  the nail does not go in easily, you will notice that the nail gets warm, especially after several strikes.    We can figure out how much its temperature will rise by connecting what we know about Newtonian mechanics with what we are learning about temperature and heat.

A 16-penny nail  will have a mass of 10 g.  This is the sort of nail used to build walls in a house. Strike it with one strong  blow from a hammer with a mass of 0.5 kg (that's about 1 lb, so this is a good sized carpenter's hammer). Assume the impact velocity of the hammer on the head is 15 m/s and that it stops firmly at each blow.

To make a reasonable assumption about the outcome, also assume that 75% of the energy of the hammer is converted into heat after the blow.   The specific heat of the steel in the nail is about 482 J kg-1 K-1  .

What is the temperature increase in the nail if it does not lose heat rapidly to the wood when when it was hammered? 

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