PHYSICS F/SCI.+ENGR.W/MOD...-W/ACCESS
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780133941579
Author: GIANCOLI
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 20, Problem 58P
(a)
To determine
The change in entropy of the system moved from state A later to state B and does this process occur or not.
(b)
To determine
The change in entropy of the system moved from state B later to state A and does this process occur or not.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A container having a volume of 5 m3 holds 8 moles of helium gas at 100°C. If the helium behaves like an ideal gas, the total energy of the system is (write your answer in kilo-joules, e.g. if the answer is 15,200 J, write 15.2)
A certain volume of gas at atmospheric pressure is compressed adiabatically to (1/5)th of its original volume. Calculate the resulting pressure. Given y=1.4 .
One mole of an ideal gas is heated slowly so that it triples its volume and pressure, in such a way that the pressure of the gas is directly proportional to its volume (linear relationship).
Whats the work consumed by the gas?
Chapter 20 Solutions
PHYSICS F/SCI.+ENGR.W/MOD...-W/ACCESS
Ch. 20.2 - An adiabatic process is defined as one in which no...Ch. 20.3 - A motor is running with an intake temperature TH =...Ch. 20.6 - A 1.00.kg piece of ice at 0C melts very slowly to...Ch. 20.9 - Prob. 1EECh. 20 - Prob. 1QCh. 20 - Can you warm a kitchen in winter by leaving the...Ch. 20 - Would a definition of heat engine efficiency as e...Ch. 20 - What plays the role of high-temperature and...Ch. 20 - Which will give the greater improvement in the...Ch. 20 - The oceans contain a tremendous amount of thermal...
Ch. 20 - Discuss the factors that keep real engines from...Ch. 20 - Prob. 8QCh. 20 - Describe a process in nature that is nearly...Ch. 20 - (a) Describe how heat could be added to a system...Ch. 20 - Suppose a gas expands to twice its original volume...Ch. 20 - Give three examples, other than those mentioned in...Ch. 20 - Which do you think has the greater entropy, 1 kg...Ch. 20 - (a) What happens if you remove the lid of a bottle...Ch. 20 - Prob. 15QCh. 20 - Prob. 16QCh. 20 - Prob. 17QCh. 20 - The first law of thermodynamics is sometimes...Ch. 20 - Powdered milk is very slowly (quasistatically)...Ch. 20 - Two identical systems are taken from state a to...Ch. 20 - It can he said that the total change in entropy...Ch. 20 - Use arguments, other than the principle of entropy...Ch. 20 - (I) A heat engine exhausts 7800 J of heat while...Ch. 20 - (I) A certain power plant puts out 580 MW of...Ch. 20 - (II) A typical compact car experiences a total...Ch. 20 - (II) A four-cylinder gasoline engine has an...Ch. 20 - (II) The burning of gasoline in a car releases...Ch. 20 - (II) Figure 2017 is a PV diagram for a reversible...Ch. 20 - (III) The operation of a diesel engine can be...Ch. 20 - (I) What is the maximum efficiency of a heat...Ch. 20 - (I) It is not necessary that a heat engines hot...Ch. 20 - (II) A heal engine exhausts its heat at 340C and...Ch. 20 - (II) (a) Show that the work done by a Carnot...Ch. 20 - (II) A Carnot engines operating temperatures are...Ch. 20 - (II) A nuclear power plant operates at 65% of its...Ch. 20 - (II) A Carnot engine performs work at the rate of...Ch. 20 - (II) Assume that a 65 kg hiker needs 4.0 103 kcal...Ch. 20 - (II) A particular car does work at the rate of...Ch. 20 - (II) A heat engine utilizes a heat source at 580C...Ch. 20 - (II) The working substance of a certain Carnot...Ch. 20 - (III) A Carnot cycle, shown in Fig. 20-7, has the...Ch. 20 - (III) One mole of monatomic gas undergoes a Carnot...Ch. 20 - (III) In an engine that approximates the Otto...Ch. 20 - (I) If an ideal refrigerator keeps its contents at...Ch. 20 - (I) The low temperature of a freezer cooling coil...Ch. 20 - (II) An ideal (Carnot) engine has an efficiency of...Ch. 20 - (II) An ideal heal pump is used to maintain the...Ch. 20 - (II) A restaurant refrigerator has a coefficient...Ch. 20 - (II) A heat pump is used to keep a house warm at...Ch. 20 - (II) (a) Given that the coefficient of performance...Ch. 20 - (II) A Carnot refrigerator (reverse of a Carnot...Ch. 20 - (II) A central heat pump updating as an air...Ch. 20 - (II) What volume of water at 0C can a freezer make...Ch. 20 - (I) What is the change in entropy of 250g of steam...Ch. 20 - (I) A 7.5-kg box having an initial speed of 4.0m/s...Ch. 20 - (I) What is the change in entropy of 1.00 m3 of...Ch. 20 - (II) If 1.00m3 of water at 0C is frozen and cooled...Ch. 20 - (II) If 0.45kg f water at 100C is changed by a...Ch. 20 - (II) An aluminum rod conducts 9.50 cal/s from a...Ch. 20 - (II) A 2.8-kg piece of aluminum at 43.0C is placed...Ch. 20 - (II) An ideal gas expands isothermally (T = 410 K)...Ch. 20 - (II) When 2.0 kg of water at 12.0C is mixed with...Ch. 20 - (II) (a) An ice cube of mass m at 0C is placed in...Ch. 20 - (II) The temperature of 2.0mol of an ideal...Ch. 20 - (II) Calculate the change in entropy of 1.00kg of...Ch. 20 - (II) An ideal gas of n moles undergoes the...Ch. 20 - (II) Two samples of an ideal gas are initially at...Ch. 20 - (II) A 150-g insulated aluminum cup at 15C is...Ch. 20 - (II) (a) Why would you expect the total entropy...Ch. 20 - (II) 1.00 mole of nitrogen (N2) gas and 1.00 mole...Ch. 20 - (II) Thermodynamic processes are sometimes...Ch. 20 - (III) The specific heat per mole of potassium at...Ch. 20 - (III) Consider an ideal gas of n moles with molar...Ch. 20 - (III) A general theorem states that the amount of...Ch. 20 - (III) Determine the work available in a 3.5-kg...Ch. 20 - (I) Use Eq. 2014 to determine the entropy of each...Ch. 20 - (II) Suppose that you repeatedly shake six coins...Ch. 20 - (II) Calculate the relative probabilities, when...Ch. 20 - (II) (a) Suppose you have four coins, all with...Ch. 20 - Prob. 58PCh. 20 - (II) Energy may be stored for use during peak...Ch. 20 - (II) Solar cells (Fig. 20-22) can produce about...Ch. 20 - Prob. 61PCh. 20 - It has been suggested that a heat engine could be...Ch. 20 - A heat engine takes a diatomic gas around the...Ch. 20 - A 126.5-g insulated aluminum cup at 18.00C is...Ch. 20 - (a) At a steam power plant, steam engines work in...Ch. 20 - (II) Refrigeration units can be rated in tons. A...Ch. 20 - Prob. 67GPCh. 20 - (a) What is the coefficient of performance of an...Ch. 20 - The operation of a certain heat engine takes an...Ch. 20 - A car engine whose output power is 155 hp operates...Ch. 20 - Suppose a power plant delivers energy at 850 MW...Ch. 20 - 1.00 mole of an ideal monatomic gas at STP first...Ch. 20 - Two 1100-kg cars are traveling 75 km/h in opposite...Ch. 20 - Metabolizing 1.0 kg of fat results in about 3.7 ...Ch. 20 - A cooling unit for a new freezer has an inner...Ch. 20 - Prob. 76GPCh. 20 - The Stirling cycle shown in Fig 20-27, is useful...Ch. 20 - A gas turbine operates under the Brayton cycle,...Ch. 20 - Thermodynamic processes can be represented not...Ch. 20 - An aluminum can, with negligible heat capacity, is...Ch. 20 - Prob. 81GPCh. 20 - A bowl contains a large number of red, orange, and...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Don't Copy. The specific heat at constant volume at -200°C of one mole of an ideal diatomic gas isA) 1/2 R. B) R. C) 3/2 R . D)2R. E) I don’t knowarrow_forwardIn a diesel engine, the fuel is ignited without a spark plug. Instead, air in a cylinder is compressed adiabatically to a temperature above the ignition temperature of the fuel; at the point of maximum compression, the fuel is injected into the cylinder. Suppose that air at 20 C is taken into the cylinder at a volume V1 and then compressed adiabatically and quasi-statically to a temperature of 600 C and a volume V2 . If =1.4 , what is the ratio V1/V2 ? (Note: static. In an operating diesel engine, the compression is not quasi-arrow_forwardA cylinder containing three moles of a monatomic ideal gas is heated at a constant pressure of 2 atm. The temperature of the gas changes from 300 K to 350 K as a result of the expansion. Find work done (a) on the gas; and (b) by the gas.arrow_forward
- Consider a cylinder with a movable piston containing n moles of an ideal gas. The entire apparatus is immersed in a constant temperature bath of temperature T kelvin. The piston is then pushed slowly so that pressure of the gas changes quasi-statically from p1 to p2 at constant temperature T. Find the work done by the gas in terms of n, R T, p1 , and p2 .arrow_forwardUnder what circumstances would you expect a gas to behave significantly differently than predicted by the ideal gas law?arrow_forwardTwo moles of a monatomic ideal gas such as oxygen is compressed adiabatically and reversibly from a state (3 atm, 5 L) to a state with a pressure of 4 atm. (a) Find the volume and temperature of the final state. (b) Find the temperature of the initial state. (c) Find work done by the gas in the process. (d) Find the change in internal energy in the process. Assume Cv=5R and Cp=Cv+R for the diatomic ideal gas in the conditions given.arrow_forward
- Two moles of nitrogen gas, with =7/5 for ideal diatomic gases, occupies a volume of 102 m3 in an insulated cylinder at temperature 300 K. The gas is adiabatically and reversibly compressed to a volume of 5 L. The piston of the cylinder is locked in its place, and the insulation around the cylinder is removed. The heat-conducting cylinder is then placed in a 300-K bath. Heat from the compressed gas leaves the gas, and the temperature of the gas becomes 300 K again. The gas is then slowly expanded at the fixed temperature 300 K until the volume of the gas becomes 102 m3, thus making a complete cycle for the gas. For the entire cycle, calculate (a) the work done by the gas, (b) the heat into or out of the gas, (c) the change in the internal energy of the gas, and (d) the change in entropy of the gas.arrow_forwardWhat does it mean when you have a unit mass of an ideal Gas? More specifically, I'm wondering as to what about the term 'unit mass' entails about the ideal gas?arrow_forwardThe only form of energy possessed by molecules of a monatomic ideal gas is translational kinetic energy. Using the results from the discussion of kinetic theory in Section 10.5, show that the internal energy of a monatomic ideal gas at pressure P and occupying volume V may be written as U = 3/2PVarrow_forward
- What happens to the volume of an ideal gas if the pressure is reduced to 90.0% of its initial pressure under constant temperature and moles of gas?arrow_forwardCalculate the amount of heat that is required to increase the temperature of 2.45 moles of an ideal monatomic gas by 22.0 K at constant pressure. Jarrow_forwardHow would the temperature of a REAL gas (not perfect) in a reversible adiabatic expansion be affected?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you