Modified Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- Combo Access -- for Physics for Scientist and Engineers (18 week)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780137504299
Author: Douglas C. Giancoli
Publisher: Pearson Education (US)
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(a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction (in W) through house walls that are 11.5 cm thick and that have an average
thermal conductivity twice that of glass wool. Assume there are no windows or doors. The surface area of the walls is
150 m2 and their inside surface is at 20.0°C, while their outside surface is at 5.00°C.
1340000
X W
(b) How many 1 kW room heaters would be needed to balance the heat transfer due to conduction? (Round your answer
to the next whole integer.)
2
1 kW room heaters
--..--
(a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction (in W) through house walls that are 11.5 cm thick and that have an
average thermal conductivity twice that of glass wool. Assume there are no windows or doors. The surface
area of the walls is 150 m² and their inside surface is at 20.0°C, while their outside surface is at 5.00°C.
1565.21 X W
(b) How many 1 kW room heaters would be needed to balance the heat transfer due to conduction? (Round your
answer to the next whole integer.)
1 kW room heaters…
(a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction (in W) through house walls that are 11.5 cm thick and that have an average thermal conductivity twice that of glass wool. Assume there are no windows or doors. The surface area of the walls is 150 m2 and their inside surface is at 20.0°C, while their outside surface is at 5.00°C.
Answer _________ W (NO scientific notation ONLY Real Number)
(b) How many 1 kW room heaters would be needed to balance the heat transfer due to conduction? (Round your answer to the next whole integer.)
Answer__________ 1 kW room heaters (NO scientific notation ONLY Real Number)
(a) What is the rate of heat conduction through the 3.00-cm-thick fur of a large animal having a 1.40-m2 surface area? Assume that the animal’s skin temperature is 32.0 °C , that the air temperature is −5.00 °C , and thatfur has the same thermal conductivity as air. (b) What food intake will the animal need in one day to replace this heat transfer?
Chapter 19 Solutions
Modified Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- Combo Access -- for Physics for Scientist and Engineers (18 week)
Ch. 19.2 - Return to the Chapter-Opening Question, page 496,...Ch. 19.5 - Prob. 1BECh. 19.5 - Prob. 1CECh. 19.5 - How much more ice at 10C would be needed in...Ch. 19.6 - What would be the internal energy change in...Ch. 19.7 - Is the work done by the gas in process ADB of Fig....Ch. 19.7 - In Example 1910, if the heat lost from the gas in...Ch. 19.10 - Prob. 1HECh. 19.10 - Fanning yourself on a hot day cools you by (a)...Ch. 19 - What happens to the work done on a jar of orange...
Ch. 19 - Prob. 2QCh. 19 - Prob. 3QCh. 19 - Prob. 4QCh. 19 - Prob. 5QCh. 19 - Why does water in a canteen stay cooler if the...Ch. 19 - Explain why burns caused by steam at 100C on the...Ch. 19 - Prob. 8QCh. 19 - Will potatoes cook faster if the water is boiling...Ch. 19 - Prob. 10QCh. 19 - Use the conservation of energy to explain why the...Ch. 19 - Explorers on failed Arctic expeditions have...Ch. 19 - Why is wet sand at the beach cooler to walk on...Ch. 19 - When hot-air furnaces are used to heat a house,...Ch. 19 - Prob. 15QCh. 19 - An ideal monatomic gas is allowed to expand slowly...Ch. 19 - Ceiling fans are sometimes reversible, so that...Ch. 19 - Goose down sleeping bags and parkas are often...Ch. 19 - Microprocessor chips nowadays have a heat sink...Ch. 19 - Sea breezes are often encountered on sunny days at...Ch. 19 - The Earth cools off at night much more quickly...Ch. 19 - Explain why air-temperature readings are always...Ch. 19 - A premature baby in an incubator can be...Ch. 19 - A 22C day is warm, while a swimming pool at 22C...Ch. 19 - Prob. 25QCh. 19 - Prob. 26QCh. 19 - Prob. 27QCh. 19 - Prob. 28QCh. 19 - Prob. 29QCh. 19 - Prob. 30QCh. 19 - Prob. 31QCh. 19 - Prob. 32QCh. 19 - An emergency blanket is a thin shiny...Ch. 19 - Explain why cities situated by the ocean tend to...Ch. 19 - Prob. 1MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 2MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 3MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 4MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 5MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 6MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 7MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 8MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 9MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 10MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 11MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 12MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 13MCQCh. 19 - Prob. 1PCh. 19 - Prob. 2PCh. 19 - Prob. 3PCh. 19 - (II) A British thermal unit (Btu) is a unit of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 5PCh. 19 - Prob. 6PCh. 19 - Prob. 7PCh. 19 - (I) An automobile cooling system holds 18 L of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 9PCh. 19 - Prob. 10PCh. 19 - Prob. 11PCh. 19 - (II) When a 290-g piece of iron at 180C is placed...Ch. 19 - Prob. 13PCh. 19 - Prob. 14PCh. 19 - Prob. 15PCh. 19 - (II) The heat capacity. C, of an object is defined...Ch. 19 - (II) The 1.20-kg head of a hammer has a speed of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 18PCh. 19 - Prob. 19PCh. 19 - Prob. 20PCh. 19 - Prob. 21PCh. 19 - Prob. 22PCh. 19 - Prob. 23PCh. 19 - Prob. 24PCh. 19 - (II) High-altitude mountain climbers do not eat...Ch. 19 - Prob. 26PCh. 19 - Prob. 27PCh. 19 - Prob. 28PCh. 19 - Prob. 29PCh. 19 - Prob. 30PCh. 19 - Prob. 31PCh. 19 - Prob. 32PCh. 19 - Prob. 33PCh. 19 - Prob. 34PCh. 19 - Prob. 35PCh. 19 - Prob. 36PCh. 19 - Prob. 37PCh. 19 - Prob. 38PCh. 19 - (II) Consider the following two-step process. Heat...Ch. 19 - Prob. 40PCh. 19 - Prob. 41PCh. 19 - Prob. 42PCh. 19 - Prob. 43PCh. 19 - Prob. 44PCh. 19 - (III) Determine the work done by 1.00 mol of a van...Ch. 19 - Prob. 46PCh. 19 - (III) In the process of taking a gas from state a...Ch. 19 - (III) Suppose a gas is taken clockwise around the...Ch. 19 - Prob. 49PCh. 19 - Prob. 50PCh. 19 - Prob. 51PCh. 19 - Prob. 52PCh. 19 - What gas is it? (II) Show that the work done by n...Ch. 19 - Prob. 54PCh. 19 - Prob. 55PCh. 19 - Prob. 56PCh. 19 - (I) A 1.00-mol sample of an ideal diatomic gas,...Ch. 19 - (II) Show, using Eqs. 196 and 1915, that the work...Ch. 19 - (III) A 3.65-mol sample of an ideal diatomic gas...Ch. 19 - Prob. 61PCh. 19 - (III) A 1.00-mol sample of an ideal monatomic gas,...Ch. 19 - (III) Consider a parcel of air moving to a...Ch. 19 - Prob. 64PCh. 19 - Prob. 65PCh. 19 - Prob. 66PCh. 19 - Prob. 67PCh. 19 - Prob. 68PCh. 19 - Prob. 69PCh. 19 - Prob. 70PCh. 19 - Prob. 71PCh. 19 - (III) A cylindrical pipe has inner radius R1 and...Ch. 19 - Prob. 73PCh. 19 - Prob. 74GPCh. 19 - Prob. 75GPCh. 19 - Prob. 76GPCh. 19 - Prob. 77GPCh. 19 - Prob. 78GPCh. 19 - Prob. 79GPCh. 19 - Prob. 80GPCh. 19 - Prob. 81GPCh. 19 - Prob. 82GPCh. 19 - Prob. 83GPCh. 19 - Prob. 84GPCh. 19 - Prob. 85GPCh. 19 - Prob. 86GPCh. 19 - Prob. 87GPCh. 19 - The temperature of the glass surface of a 75-W...Ch. 19 - Prob. 90GPCh. 19 - A scuba diver releases a 3.60-cm-diameter...Ch. 19 - Suppose 3.0 mol of neon (an ideal monatomic gas)...Ch. 19 - Prob. 93GPCh. 19 - A diesel engine accomplishes ignition without a...Ch. 19 - Prob. 95GPCh. 19 - Prob. 96GPCh. 19 - Prob. 97GPCh. 19 - Prob. 98GPCh. 19 - Prob. 99GPCh. 19 - Prob. 100GPCh. 19 - Prob. 101GPCh. 19 - Prob. 102GPCh. 19 - Prob. 103GPCh. 19 - Prob. 104GP
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- At 25.0 m below the surface of the sea, where the temperature is 5.00C, a diver exhales an air bubble having a volume of 1.00 cm3. If the surface temperature of the sea is 20.0C, what is the volume of the bubble just before it breaks the surface?arrow_forwardFor the human body, what is the rate of heat transfer by conduction through the body's tissue with the following conditions: the tissue thickness is 3.00 cm, the difference in temperature is 2.00 , and the skin area is 1.50 m2. How does this compare with the average heat transfer rate to the body resulting from an energy intake of about 2400 kcal per day? (No exercise is included.)arrow_forwardOne easy way to reduce heating (and cooling) costs is to add extra insulation in the attic of a house. Suppose a single-story cubical house already had 15 cm of fiberglass insulation in the attic and in all the exterior surfaces. If you added an extra 8.0 cm of fiberglass to the attic, by what percentage would the heating cost of the house drop? Take the house to have dimensions 10 m by 15 m by 3.0 m. Ignore air infiltration and heat loss through windows and doors, and assume that the interior is uniformly at one temperature and the exterior is uniformly at another.arrow_forward
- (a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction (in W) through house walls that are 11.5 cm thick and that have an average thermal conductivity twice that of glass wool. Assume there are no windows or doors. The surface area of the walls is 150 m? and their inside surface is at 20.0°C, while their outside surface is at 5.00°C. 1560 X W (b) How many 1 kW room heaters would be needed to balance the heat transfer due to conduction? (Round your answer to the next whole integer.) 1 kW room heaters (a) Calculate the rate of heat conduction (in W) through house walls that are 11.5 cm thick and that have an average thermal conductivity twice that of glass wool. Assume there are no windows or doors. The surface area of the walls is 150 m? and their inside surface is at 20.0°C, while their outside surface is at 5.00°C. 1565.21 X W (b) How many 1 kW room heaters would be needed to balance the heat transfer due to conduction? (Round your answer to the next whole integer.) 12 1 kW room heaters now from O…arrow_forward(a) What is the rate of heat conduction through the 3.00-cm-thick fur of a large animal having a 1.40-m2 surface area? Assume that the animal’s skin temperature is 32.0ºC , that the air temperature is −5.00ºC , and that furhas the same thermal conductivity as air. (b) What food intake will the animal need in one day to replace this heat transfer?arrow_forwardThe coretemperature of the human body is 37.0 °C, and the skin, with a surface area of 1.40 m2, has a temperature of 34.0 °C. (a) Find therate of heat transfer out of the body under the following assumptions: (i) The average thickness of tissue between the core and theskin is 1.20 cm; (ii) the thermal conductivity of the tissue is that ofwater. (b) Without repeating the calculation of part (a), what rateof heat transfer would you expect if the skin temperature were tofall to 31.0 °C? Explain.arrow_forward
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