EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
9th Edition
ISBN: 8220100654428
Author: Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning US
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Chapter 20, Problem 20.79AP
To determine
The initial mass of ice.
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There are two separate containers, each filled with a different ideal gas. Container A contains helium (He) and container B contains neon (Ne). Both have the same mass density and the same absolute pressure. If the gas in container A is at a temperature of -110.01 °C, what is the temperature of the gas in container B, in Kelvin?
A clown at a birthday party has brought along a helium cylinder, with which he intends to fill balloons. When full, each balloon contains 0.00440 m3 of helium at an absolute pressure of 1.10 x 105 Pa. The cylinder contains helium at an absolute pressure of 1.90 x 107 Pa and has a volume of 0.00320 m3. The temperature of the helium in the tank and in the balloons is the same and remains constant. What is the maximum number of people who will get a balloon?
During the summer after your first year, you are lucky enough to get a job making coffee at Starbucks, but you tell your parents and friends that you have secured a lucrative position as a “java engineer.” An eccentric chemistry professor stops in every day and orders 250 mL of house coffee at precisely 95°C. He then adds enough milk at 4°C to drop the temperature of the coffee to 90°C.
Calculate the amount of milk (in mL) the professor must add to reach this temperature.
(Assume coffee and milk have the same specific heat capacity: 4.186 J/g°C. Assume that they also have the same density: 1.0 g/mL)
Calculate the heat lost by the coffee when its temperature is decreased from 95°C to 90°C.
Chapter 20 Solutions
EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.1QQCh. 20 - Suppose the same process of adding energy to the...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.3QQCh. 20 - Characterize the paths in Figure 19.12 as...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.5QQCh. 20 - An ideal gas is compressed to half its initial...Ch. 20 - A poker is a stiff, nonflammable rod used to push...Ch. 20 - Assume you are measuring the specific heat of a...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.4OQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.5OQ
Ch. 20 - Ethyl alcohol has about one-half the specific heat...Ch. 20 - The specific heat of substance A is greater than...Ch. 20 - Beryllium has roughly one-half the specific heat...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.9OQCh. 20 - A 100-g piece of copper, initially at 95.0C, is...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.11OQCh. 20 - If a gas is compressed isothermally, which of the...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.13OQCh. 20 - If a gas undergoes an isobaric process, which of...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.15OQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.1CQCh. 20 - You need to pick up a very hot cooking pot in your...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.3CQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.4CQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.5CQCh. 20 - In 1801, Humphry Davy rubbed together pieces of...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.7CQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.8CQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.9CQCh. 20 - When camping in a canyon on a still night, a...Ch. 20 - Pioneers stored fruits and vegetables in...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.12CQCh. 20 - Prob. 20.1PCh. 20 - Consider Joules apparatus described in Figure...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.3PCh. 20 - The highest waterfall in the world is the Salto...Ch. 20 - What mass of water at 25.0C must be allowed to...Ch. 20 - The temperature of a silver bar rises by 10.0C...Ch. 20 - In cold climates, including the northern United...Ch. 20 - A 50.0-g sample of copper is at 25.0C. If 1 200 J...Ch. 20 - An aluminum cup of mass 200 g contains 800 g of...Ch. 20 - If water with a mass mk at temperature Tk is...Ch. 20 - A 1.50-kg iron horseshoe initially at 600C is...Ch. 20 - An electric drill with a steel drill bit of mass m...Ch. 20 - An aluminum calorimeter with a mass of 100 g...Ch. 20 - A 3.00-g copper coin at 25.0C drops 50.0 m to the...Ch. 20 - Two thermally insulated vessels are connected by a...Ch. 20 - A 50.0-g copper calorimeter contains 250 g of...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.17PCh. 20 - How much energy is required to change a 40.0-g ice...Ch. 20 - A 75.0-g ice cube at 0C is placed in 825 g of...Ch. 20 - A 3.00-g lead bullet at 30.0C is fired at a speed...Ch. 20 - Steam at 100C is added to ice at 0C. (a) Find the...Ch. 20 - A 1.00-kg Mock of copper at 20.0C is dropped into...Ch. 20 - In an insulated vessel, 250 g of ice at 0C is...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.24PCh. 20 - An ideal gas is enclosed in a cylinder with a...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.26PCh. 20 - One mole of an ideal gas is warmed slowly so that...Ch. 20 - (a) Determine the work done on a gas that expands...Ch. 20 - An ideal gas is taken through a quasi-static...Ch. 20 - A gas is taken through the cyclic process...Ch. 20 - Consider the cyclic process depicted in Figure...Ch. 20 - Why is the following situation impossible? An...Ch. 20 - A thermodynamic system undergoes a process in...Ch. 20 - A sample of an ideal gas goes through the process...Ch. 20 - A 2.00-mol sample of helium gas initially at 300...Ch. 20 - (a) How much work is done on the steam when 1.00...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.37PCh. 20 - One mole of an ideal gas does 3 000 J of work on...Ch. 20 - A 1.00-kg block of aluminum is warmed at...Ch. 20 - In Figure P19.22, the change in internal energy of...Ch. 20 - An ideal gas initially at Pi, Vi, and Ti is taken...Ch. 20 - An ideal gas initially at Pi, Vi, and Ti is taken...Ch. 20 - A glass windowpane in a home is 0.620 cm thick and...Ch. 20 - A concrete slab is 12.0 cm thick and has an area...Ch. 20 - A student is trying to decide what to wear. His...Ch. 20 - The surface of the Sun has a temperature of about...Ch. 20 - The tungsten filament of a certain 100-W lightbulb...Ch. 20 - At high noon, the Sun delivers 1 000 W to each...Ch. 20 - Two lightbulbs have cylindrical filaments much...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.50PCh. 20 - A copper rod and an aluminum rod of equal diameter...Ch. 20 - A box with a total surface area of 1.20 m2 and a...Ch. 20 - (a) Calculate the R-value of a thermal window made...Ch. 20 - At our distance from the Sun, the intensity of...Ch. 20 - A bar of gold (Au) is in thermal contact with a...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.56PCh. 20 - Prob. 20.57PCh. 20 - A gas expands from I to Fin Figure P20.58 (page...Ch. 20 - Gas in a container is at a pressure of 1.50 atm...Ch. 20 - Liquid nitrogen has a boiling point of 77.3 K and...Ch. 20 - An aluminum rod 0.500 m in length and with a cross...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.62APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.63APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.64APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.65APCh. 20 - An ice-cube tray is filled with 75.0 g of water....Ch. 20 - On a cold winter day. you buy roasted chestnuts...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.68APCh. 20 - An iron plate is held against an iron wheel so...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.70APCh. 20 - A 40.0-g ice cube floats in 200 g of water in a...Ch. 20 - One mole of an ideal gas is contained in a...Ch. 20 - Review. A 670-kg meteoroid happens to be composed...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.74APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.75APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.76APCh. 20 - Water in an electric teakettle is boiling. The...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.78APCh. 20 - Prob. 20.79APCh. 20 - A student measures the following data in a...Ch. 20 - Consider the piston cylinder apparatus shown in...Ch. 20 - A spherical shell has inner radius 3.00 cm and...Ch. 20 - Prob. 20.83CPCh. 20 - (a) The inside of a hollow cylinder is maintained...
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- (a) An ideal gas occupies a volume of 1.0 cm3 at 20.C and atmospheric pressure. Determine the number of molecules of gas in the container, (b) If the pressure of the 1.0-cm3 volume is reduced to 1.0 1011 Pa (an extremely good vacuum) while the temperature remains constant, how many moles of gas remain in the container?arrow_forward(a) An ideal gas occupies a volume of 1.0 cm3 at 20.C and atmospheric pressure. Determine the number of molecules of gas in the container, (b) If the pressure of the 1.0-cm3 volume is reduced to 1.0 1011 Pa (an extremely good vacuum) while the temperature remains constant, how many moles of gas remain in the container?arrow_forwardCase Study When a constant-volume thermometer is in thermal contact with a substance whose temperature is lower than the triple point of water, how does the right tube in Figure 19.22 need to be moved? Explain. FIGURE 19.22 1 Gas in the constant-volume gas thermometer is at Ti, and the mercury in the manometer is at height hi above the gasmercury boundary. 2 The thermometer is placed in thermal contact with an object, and its temperature increases. The increased temperature increases the gas volume. 3 By raising the right-hand tube of the mercury manometer, the gas volume is restored to its original size. The mercury is now at hi + h above the gasmercury boundary. This increase in height is a result of the increase in gas temperature and pressure.arrow_forward
- During the summer after your first year, you are lucky enough to get a job making coffee at Starbucks, but you tell your parents and friends that you have secured a lucrative position as a “java engineer.” An eccentric chemistry professor stops in every day and orders 250 mL of house coffee at precisely 95°C. He then adds enough milk at 4°C to drop the temperature of the coffee to 90°C. Calculate the amount of milk (in mL) the professor must add to reach this temperature. (Assume coffee and milk have the same specific heat capacity: 4.186 J/g°C. Assume that they also have the same density: 1.0 g/mL)arrow_forwardFour closed tanks, A, B, C, and D, each contain an ideal gas. The table gives the absolute pressure and volume of the gas in each tank. In each case, there is 0.19 mol of gas. Using this number and the data in the table, compute the temperature of the gas in each tank. Absolute pressure (Pa) Volume (m³) A 25.0 4.0 B 30.0 5.0 C 20.0 5.0 D 2.0 75arrow_forwardConsider an ideal gas with an absolute temperature of T1. To A) what temperature would the gas need to be heated to double it’s pressure? Express the answer in terms of T1 B) consider an ideal gas with a volume of V1. To what volume would the gas need to be compressed to double it’s pressure? Express the answer in terms of V1arrow_forward
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