UNIVERSITY PHYSICS V.2 W/ACCESS >IC<
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781323631638
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Chapter 19, Problem Q19.4DQ
To determine
Whether it can be possible to determine the internal energy change due to work or to heat transfer .
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UNIVERSITY PHYSICS V.2 W/ACCESS >IC<
Ch. 19 - Prob. Q19.1DQCh. 19 - Prob. Q19.2DQCh. 19 - In which situation must you do more work:...Ch. 19 - Prob. Q19.4DQCh. 19 - Discuss the application of the first law of...Ch. 19 - When ice melts at 0C, its volume decreases. Is the...Ch. 19 - You hold an inflated balloon over a hot-air vent...Ch. 19 - You bake chocolate chip cookies and put them,...Ch. 19 - Imagine a gas made up entirely of negatively...Ch. 19 - In an adiabatic process for an ideal gas, the...
Ch. 19 - When you blow on the back of your hand with your...Ch. 19 - An ideal gas expands while the pressure is kept...Ch. 19 - A liquid is irregularly stirred in a...Ch. 19 - When you use a hand pump to inflate the tires of...Ch. 19 - In the carburetor of an aircraft or automobile...Ch. 19 - On a sunny day, large bubbles of air form on the...Ch. 19 - The prevailing winds on the Hawaiian island of...Ch. 19 - Applying the same considerations as in Question...Ch. 19 - In a constant-volume process, dU = nCV dT. But in...Ch. 19 - When a gas surrounded by air is compressed...Ch. 19 - When a gas expands adiabatically, it does work on...Ch. 19 - Prob. Q19.22DQCh. 19 - A system is taken from state a to state b along...Ch. 19 - A thermodynamic system undergoes a cyclic process...Ch. 19 - Two moles of an ideal gas are heated at constant...Ch. 19 - Six moles of an ideal gas are in a cylinder fitted...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.3ECh. 19 - BIO Work Done by the Lungs. The graph in Fig....Ch. 19 - CALC During the time 0.305 mol of an ideal gas...Ch. 19 - A gas undergoes two processes. In the first, the...Ch. 19 - Work Done in a Cyclic Process. (a) In Fig. 19.7a,...Ch. 19 - Figure E19.8 shows a pV-diagram for an ideal gas...Ch. 19 - A gas in a cylinder expands from a volume of 0.110...Ch. 19 - Five moles of an ideal monatomic gas with an...Ch. 19 - The process abc shown in the pV-diagram in Fig....Ch. 19 - A gas in a cylinder is held at a constant pressure...Ch. 19 - The pV-diagram in Fig. E19.13 shows a process abc...Ch. 19 - Boiling Water at High Pressure. When water is...Ch. 19 - An ideal gas is taken from a to b on the...Ch. 19 - During an isothermal compression of an ideal gas,...Ch. 19 - A cylinder contains 0.250 mol of carbon dioxide...Ch. 19 - A cylinder contains 0.0100 mol of helium at T =...Ch. 19 - In an experiment to simulate conditions inside an...Ch. 19 - When a quantity of monatomic ideal gas expands at...Ch. 19 - Heat Q flows into a monatomic ideal gas, and the...Ch. 19 - Three moles of an ideal monatomic gas expands at a...Ch. 19 - An experimenter adds 970 J of heat to 1.75 mol of...Ch. 19 - Propane gas (C3Hg) behaves like an ideal gas with ...Ch. 19 - CALC The temperature of 0.150 mol of an ideal gas...Ch. 19 - Five moles of monatomic ideal gas have initial...Ch. 19 - A monatomic ideal gas that is initially at 1.50 ...Ch. 19 - The engine of a Ferrari F355 F1 sports car takes...Ch. 19 - During an adiabatic expansion the temperature of...Ch. 19 - A player bounces a basketball on the floor,...Ch. 19 - On a warm summer day, a large mass of air...Ch. 19 - A cylinder contains 0.100 mol of an ideal...Ch. 19 - A quantity of air is taken from state a to state b...Ch. 19 - One-half mole of an ideal gas is taken from state...Ch. 19 - Figure P19.35 shows the pV-diagram for a process...Ch. 19 - The graph in Fig. P19.36 shows a pV-diagram for...Ch. 19 - When a system is taken from state a to state b in...Ch. 19 - A thermodynamic system is taken from state a to...Ch. 19 - A volume of air (assumed to be an ideal gas) is...Ch. 19 - Three moles of argon gas (assumed to be an ideal...Ch. 19 - Two moles of an ideal monatomic gas go through the...Ch. 19 - Three moles of an ideal gas are taken around cycle...Ch. 19 - Figure P19.43 shows a pV-diagram for 0.0040 mol of...Ch. 19 - (a) Onc-third of a mole of He gas is taken along...Ch. 19 - Starting with 2.50 mol of N2 gas (assumed to be...Ch. 19 - Nitrogen gas in an expandable container is cooled...Ch. 19 - CALC A cylinder with a frictionless, movable...Ch. 19 - CP A Thermodynamic Process in a Solid. A cube of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.49PCh. 19 - High-Altitude Research. A large research balloon...Ch. 19 - An air pump has a cylinder 0.250 m long with a...Ch. 19 - A certain ideal gas has molar heat capacity at...Ch. 19 - A monatomic ideal gas expands slowly to twice its...Ch. 19 - CALC A cylinder with a piston contains 0.250 mol...Ch. 19 - Use the conditions and processes of Problem 19.54...Ch. 19 - CALC A cylinder with a piston contains 0.150 mol...Ch. 19 - Use the conditions and processes of Problem 19.56...Ch. 19 - Comparing Thermodynamic Processes. In a cylinder,...Ch. 19 - DATA You have recorded measurements of the heat...Ch. 19 - DATA You compress a gas in an insulated cylinderno...Ch. 19 - DATA You place a quantity of gas into a metal...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.62CPCh. 19 - BIO ANESTHETIC GASES. One type of gas mixture used...Ch. 19 - BIO ANESTHETIC GASES. One type of gas mixture used...Ch. 19 - BIO ANESTHETIC GASES. One type of gas mixture used...Ch. 19 - BIO ANESTHETIC GASES. One type of gas mixture used...
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- (a) How much heat transfer occurs from 20.0 kg of 90.0C water placed in contact with 20.0 kg of 10.0C water, producing a final temperature of 50.0C ? (b) How much work could a Carnot engine do with this heat transfer, assuming it operates between two reservoirs at constant temperatures of 90.0C and 10.0C ? (c) What increase in entropy is produced by mixing 20.0 kg of 90.0C water with 20.0 kg of 10.0C water? (d) Calculate the amount of work made unavailable by this mixing using a low temperature of 10.0C, and compare it with the work done by the Garnet engine. Explicitly show how you follow the steps in the Problem-Solving Strategies for Entropy. (e) Discuss how everyday processes make increasingly more energy unavailable to do work, as implied by this problem.arrow_forwardIn a cylinder, a sample of an ideal gas with number of moles n undergoes an adiabatic process. (a) Starting with the expression W=PdV and using the condition PV = constant, show that the work done on the gas is W=(11)(PfVfPiVi) (b) Starting with the first law of thermodynamics, show that the work done on the gas is equal to nCV(Tf Ti). (c) Are these two results consistent with each other? Explain.arrow_forwardA system does 1.80108J of work while 7.50108J of heat transfer occurs to the environment. What is the change in internal energy of the system assuming no other changes (such as in temperature or by the addition of fuel)?arrow_forward
- In a very mild winter climate, a heat pump has heat transfer from an environment at 5.00C to one at 35.0C. What is the best possible coefficient of performance for these temperatures? Explicitly show how you follow the steps in the Problem-Solving Strategies for Thermodynamics.arrow_forwardThere is no change in the internal of an ideal gas undergoing an isothermal process since the internal energy depends only on the temperature. Is it therefore correct to say that an isothermal process is the same as an adiabatic process for an ideal gas? Explain your answer. `arrow_forwardA great deal of effort time, and money has been spent in the quest for the so-called perpetual-motion machine, which is defined as a hypothetical machine that operates or produces useful work indefinitely and/or a hypothetical machine that produces more work or energy than it consumes. Explain, in terms of heat engines and the first law of thermodynamics, why or why not such a machine is likely to be constructed.arrow_forward
- A thermodynamic system undergoes a process in which its internal energy decreases by 500 J. Over the same time interval, 220 J of work is done on the system. Find the energy transferred from it by heat.arrow_forwardThe insulated cylinder shown below is closed at both ends and contains an insulating piston that is flee to move on frictionless bearings. The piston divides the chamber into two compartments containing gases A and B. Originally, each compartment has a volume of 5.0102 m3 and contains a monatomic ideal gas at a temperature of and a pressure of 1.0 atm. (a) How many moles of gas are in each compartment? (b) Heat Q is slowly added to A so that it expands and B is compressed until the pressure of both gases is 3.0 atm. Use the fact that the compression of B is adiabatic to determine the final volume of both gases. (c) What are their final temperatures? (d) What is the value of Q?arrow_forwardThe temperature of a rapidly expanding gas decreases. Explain why in terms of the first law of thermodynamics. (Hint: Consider whether the gas does work and whether heat transfer occurs rapidly into the gas through conduction.)arrow_forward
- Give an example of a spontaneous process in which a system becomes less ordered and energy becomes less available to do work. What happens to the system's entropy in this process?arrow_forward(a) On a winter day, a certain house loses 5.00108J of heat to the outside (about 500,000 Btu). What is the total change in entropy due to this heat transfer alone, assuming an average indoor temperature of 21.0C and an average outdoor temperature of 5.00C ? (b) This large change in entropy implies a large amount of energy has become unavailable to do work. Where do we find more energy when such energy is lost to us?arrow_forward(a) In reaching equilibrium, how much heat transfer occurs from 1.00 kg of water at 40.0C when it is placed in contact with 1.00 kg of 20.0C water in reaching equilibrium? (b) What is the change in entropy due to this heat transfer? (c) How much work is made unavailable, taking the lowest temperature to be 20.0C ? Explicitly show how you follow the steps in the Problem-Solving Strategies for Entropy.arrow_forward
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