2.99 See Answer

Question:


(a). Calculate the theoretical efficiency for an Otto-cycle engine with γ = 1.40 and r = 9.50.
(b). If this engine takes in 10,000 J of heat from burning its fuel, how much heat does it discard to the outside air?


> A uniform electric field exists in the region between two oppositely charged plane parallel plates. A proton is released from rest at the surface of the positively charged plate and strikes the surface of the opposite plate, 1.60 cm distant from the firs

> In Exercise 21.29, what is the speed of the electron as it emerges from the field? Exercise 21.29: An electron is projected with an initial speed v0 = 1.60 × 106 m/s into the uniform field between two parallel plates (Fig. E21.29). Assume

> (a). Calculate the magnitude and direction (relative to the +x-axis) of the electric field in Example 21.6. (b). A -2.5-nC point charge is placed at point P in Fig. 21.19. Find the magnitude and direction of (i) the force that the -8.0-nC charge at the

> An electron is projected with an initial speed v0 = 1.60 × 106 m/s into the uniform field between two parallel plates (Fig. E21.29). Assume that the field between the plates is uniform and directed vertically downward and that the field outs

> The earth has a net electric charge that causes a field at points near its surface equal to 150 N/C and directed in toward the center of the earth. (a). What magnitude and sign of charge would a 60-kg human have to acquire to overcome his or her weight

> (a). What must the charge (sign and magnitude) of a 1.45-g particle be for it to remain stationary when placed in a downward-directed electric field of magnitude 650 N/C? (b). What is the magnitude of an electric field in which the electric force on a p

> An electron is released from rest in a uniform electric field. The electron accelerates vertically upward, traveling 4.50 m in the first 3.00 µs after it is released. (a). What are the magnitude and direction of the electric field? (b). Are we justifie

> A proton is traveling horizontally to the right at 4.50 × 106 m/s. (a). Find the magnitude and direction of the weakest electric field that can bring the proton uniformly to rest over a distance of 3.20 cm. (b). How much time does it take the proton to

> A proton is placed in a uniform electric field of 2.75 × 103 N/C. Calculate (a). the magnitude of the electric force felt by the proton; (b). the proton’s acceleration; (c). the proton’s speed after 1.00 ms in the field, assuming it starts from rest.

> What similarities do electric forces have with gravitational forces? What are the most significant differences?

> Refer to Exercise 21.21. Figure E21.22 shows the bonding of cytosine and guanine. The O—H and H—N distances are each 0.110 nm. In this case, assume that the bonding is due only to the forces along the Oâ€&#1

> The two sides of the DNA double helix are connected by pairs of bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine). Because of the geometric shape of these molecules, adenine bonds with thymine and cytosine bonds with guanine. Figure E21.21 shows the bondin

> Two point charges are placed on the x-axis as follows: Charge q1 = +4.00 nC is located at x = 0.200 m, and charge q2 = +5.00 nC is at x = -0.300 m. What are the magnitude and direction of the total force exerted by these two charges on a negative point c

> Two point charges are located on the y-axis as follows: charge q1 = -1.50 nC at y = -0.600 m, and charge q2 = +3.20 nC at the origin (y = 0). What is the total force (magnitude and direction) exerted by these two charges on a third charge q3 = +5.00 nC l

> Repeat Exercise 21.17 for q3 = +8.00 µC. Exercise 21.17: Three point charges are arranged along the x-axis. Charge q1 = +3.00 µC is at the origin, and charge q2 = -5.00 µC is at x = 0.200 m. Charge q3 = -8.00 µC. Where is q3 located if the net force on

> Three point charges are arranged along the x-axis. Charge q1 = +3.00 µC is at the origin, and charge q2 = -5.00 µC is at x = 0.200 m. Charge q3 = -8.00 µC. Where is q3 located if the net force on q1 is 7.00 N in the –x-direction?

> In Example 21.3, calculate the net force on charge q1.

> In Example 21.4, suppose the point charge on the y-axis at y = -0.30 m has negative charge -2.0 µC, and the other charges remain the same. Find the magnitude and direction of the net force on Q. How does your answer differ from that in Example 21.4? Expl

> In an experiment in space, one proton is held fixed and another proton is released from rest a distance of 2.50 mm away. (a). What is the initial acceleration of the proton after it is released? (b). Sketch qualitative (no numbers!) acceleration–time a

> Suppose you had two small boxes, each containing 1.0 g of protons. (a). If one were placed on the moon by an astronaut and the other were left on the earth, and if they were connected by a very light (and very long!) string, what would be the tension in

> You charge up the Van de Graaff generator shown in Fig. 22.26, and then bring an identical but uncharged hollow conducting sphere near it, without letting the two spheres touch. Sketch the distribution of charges on the second sphere. What is the net flu

> Two small plastic spheres are given positive electric charges. When they are 15.0 cm apart, the repulsive force between them has magnitude 0.220 N. What is the charge on each sphere? (a). if the two charges are equal and (b). if one sphere has four time

> Two small aluminum spheres, each having mass 0.0250 kg, are separated by 80.0 cm. (a). How many electrons does each sphere contain? (The atomic mass of aluminum is 26.982 g/mol, and its atomic number is 13.) (b). How many electrons would have to be rem

> Neurons are components of the nervous system of the body that transmit signals as electric impulses travel along their length. These impulses propagate when charge suddenly rushes into and then out of a part of the neuron called an axon. Measurements hav

> You have a pure (24-karat) gold ring of mass 10.8 g. Gold has an atomic mass of 197 g/mol and an atomic number of 79. (a). How many protons are in the ring, and what is their total positive charge? (b). If the ring carries no net charge, how many elect

> If a proton and an electron are released when they are 2.0 × 10-10 m apart (a typical atomic distance), find the initial acceleration of each particle.

> Lightning occurs when there is a flow of electric charge (principally electrons) between the ground and a thundercloud. The maximum rate of charge flow in a lightning bolt is about 20,000 C/s; this lasts for 100 ms or less. How much charge flows between

> Excess electrons are placed on a small lead sphere with mass 8.00 g so that its net charge is -3.20 × 10-9 C. (a). Find the number of excess electrons on the sphere. (b). How many excess electrons are there per lead atom? The atomic number of lead is 8

> A box is separated by a partition into two parts of equal volume. The left side of the box contains 500 molecules of nitrogen gas; the right side contains 100 molecules of oxygen gas. The two gases are at the same temperature. The partition is punctured,

> Two moles of an ideal gas occupy a volume V. The gas expands isothermally and reversibly to a volume 3V. (a). Is the velocity distribution changed by the isothermal expansion? Explain. (b). Use Eq. (20.23) to calculate the change in entropy of the gas.

> Premium gasoline produces 1.23 × 108 J of heat per gallon when it is burned at approximately 400°C (although the amount can vary with the fuel mixture). If a car’s engine is 25% efficient, three-fourths of that heat is expelled into the air, typically at

> A proton is placed in a uniform electric field and then released. Then an electron is placed at this same point and released. Do these two particles experience the same force? The same acceleration? Do they move in the same direction when released?

> (a). Calculate the change in entropy when 1.00 kg of water at 1000C is vaporized and converted to steam at 1000C. (b). Compare your answer to the change in entropy when 1.00 kg of ice is melted at 00C, calculated in Example 20.5 (Section 20.7). Is the c

> What is the change in entropy of 0.130 kg of helium gas at the normal boiling point of helium when it all condenses isothermally to 1.00 L of liquid helium? (Hint: See Table 17.4 in Section 17.6.) Table 17.4: Normal Melting Point Normal Boiling Poi

> Three moles of an ideal gas undergo a reversible isothermal compression at 20.00C. During this compression, 1850 J of work is done on the gas. What is the change of entropy of the gas?

> You make tea with 0.250 kg of 85.00C water and let it cool to room temperature (20.00C). (a). Calculate the entropy change of the water while it cools. (b). The cooling process is essentially isothermal for the air in your kitchen. Calculate the change

> A 15.0-kg block of ice at 0.00C melts to liquid water at 0.00C inside a large room at 20.00C. Treat the ice and the room as an isolated system, and assume that the room is large enough for its temperature change to be ignored. (a). Is the melting of the

> You decide to take a nice hot bath but discover that your thoughtless roommate has used up most of the hot water. You fill the tub with 195 kg of 30.00C water and attempt to warm it further by pouring in 5.00 kg of boiling water from the stove. (a). Is t

> A 4.50-kg block of ice at 0.00°C falls into the ocean and melts. The average temperature of the ocean is 3.50°C, including all the deep water. By how much does the change of this ice to water at 3.50°C alter the entropy of the world? Does the entropy inc

> A Carnot refrigerator is operated between two heat reservoirs at temperatures of 320 K and 270 K. (a). If in each cycle the refrigerator receives 415 J of heat energy from the reservoir at 270 K, how many joules of heat energy does it deliver to the res

> A certain brand of freezer is advertised to use 730 kW ∙ h of energy per year. (a). Assuming the freezer operates for 5 hours each day, how much power does it require while operating? (b). If the freezer keeps its interior at -5.00C in a 20.00C room, w

> A Carnot engine has an efficiency of 66% and performs 2.5 × 104 J of work in each cycle. (a). How much heat does the engine extract from its heat source in each cycle? (b). Suppose the engine exhausts heat at room temperature (20.00C). What is the temp

> (a).In a certain region of space, the volume charge density

> An ice-making machine operates in a Carnot cycle. It takes heat from water at 0.00C and rejects heat to a room at 24.00C. Suppose that 85.0 kg of water at 0.00C are converted to ice at 0.00C. (a). How much heat is discharged into the room? (b). How muc

> A refrigerator has a coefficient of performance of 2.25, runs on an input of 135 W of electrical power, and keeps its inside compartment at 5°C. If you put a dozen 1.0-L plastic bottles of water at 31°C into this refrigerator, how long will it take for t

> A freezer has a coefficient of performance of 2.40. The freezer is to convert 1.80 kg of water at 25.00C to 1.80 kg of ice at -5.00C in one hour. (a). What amount of heat must be removed from the water at 25.00C to convert it to ice at -5.00C? (b). How

> A refrigerator has a coefficient of performance of 2.10. In each cycle it absorbs 3.10 × 104 J of heat from the cold reservoir. (a). How much mechanical energy is required each cycle to operate the refrigerator? (b). During each cycle, how much heat is

> The coefficient of performance K = H/P is a dimensionless quantity. Its value is independent of the units used for H and P, as long as the same units, such as watts, are used for both quantities. However, it is common practice to express H in Btu/h and P

> The Otto-cycle engine in a Mercedes-Benz SLK230 has a compression ratio of 8.8. (a). What is the ideal efficiency of the engine? Use γ = 1.40. (b). The engine in a Dodge Viper GT2 has a slightly higher compression ratio of 9.6. How much increase in the

> A solid conducting sphere with radius R that carries positive charge Q is concentric with a very thin insulating shell of radius 2R that also carries charge Q. The charge Q is distributed uniformly over the insulating shell. (a). Find the electric field

> A solid conducting sphere carrying charge q has radius a. It is inside a concentric hollow conducting sphere with inner radius b and outer radius c. The hollow sphere has no net charge. (a). Derive expressions for the electric field magnitude in terms o

> A very long, solid cylinder with radius R has positive charge uniformly distributed throughout it, with charge per unit volume

> When two point charges of equal mass and charge are released on a frictionless table, each has an initial acceleration (magnitude) a0. If instead you keep one fixed and release the other one, what will be its initial acceleration: a0, 2a0, or a0/2? Expla

> A very long conducting tube (hollow cylinder) has inner radius a and outer radius b. It carries charge per unit length +

> A long coaxial cable consists of an inner cylindrical conductor with radius a and an outer coaxial cylinder with inner radius b and outer radius c. The outer cylinder is mounted on insulating supports and has no net charge. The inner cylinder has a unifo

> A long line carrying a uniform linear charge density +50.0 µC/m runs parallel to and 10.0 cm from the surface of a large, flat plastic sheet that has a uniform surface charge density of -100 µC/m2 on one side. Find the location of all points where an a p

> The electric field

> Two particles having charges q1 = 0.500 nC and q2 = 8.00 nC are separated by a distance of 1.20 m. At what point along the line connecting the two charges is the total electric field due to the two charges equal to zero?

> Point charge q1 = -6.00 × 10-6 C is on the x-axis at x = -0.200 m. Point charge q2 is on the x-axis at x = +0.400 m. Point charge q3 = +3.00 × 10-6 C is at the origin. What is q2 (magnitude and sign) (a). if the net force on q3 is 6.00 N in the +x-direc

> A small 12.3-g plastic ball is tied to a very light 28.6-cm string that is attached to the vertical wall of a room (Fig. P21.65). A uniform horizontal electric field exists in this room. When the ball has been given an excess charge of -1.11 Â&micr

> Two identical spheres are each attached to silk threads of length L = 0.500 m and hung from a common point (Fig. P21.62). Each sphere has mass m = 8.00 g. The radius of each sphere is very small compared to the distance between the spheres, so they may b

> Two small spheres with mass m = 15.0 g are hung by silk threads of length L = 1.20 m from a common point (Fig. P21.62). When the spheres are given equal quantities of negative charge, so that q1 = q2 = q, each thread hangs at

> The electric field

> Explain this statement: “In a static situation, the electric field at the surface of a conductor can have no component parallel to the surface because this would violate the condition that the charges on the surface are at rest.” Would this statement be

> A very small object with mass 8.20 × 10-9 kg and positive charge 6.50 × 10-9 C is projected directly toward a very large insulating sheet of positive charge that has uniform surface charge density 5.90 × 10-8 C/m2. The object is initially 0.400 m from th

> Two charges are placed on the x-axis: one, of 2.50 µC, at the origin and the other, of -3.50 µC, at x = 0.600 m (Fig. P21.60). Find the position on the x-axis where the net force on a small charge +q would be zero. Fig. P21.60:

> A person who has skin of surface area 1.85 m2 and temperature 30.0°C is resting in an insulated room where the ambient air temperature is 20.0°C. In this state, a person gets rid of excess heat by radiation. By how much does the person change the entropy

> A heat engine operates using the cycle shown in Fig. P20.41. The working substance is 2.00 mol of helium gas, which reaches a maximum temperature of 3270C. Assume the helium can be treated as an ideal gas. Process bc is isothermal. Fig. P20.41: The pr

> As a budding mechanical engineer, you are called upon to design a Carnot engine that has 2.00 mol of a monatomic ideal gas as its working substance and operates from a high temperature reservoir at 5000C. The engine is to lift a 15.0-kg weight 2.00 m per

> You build a heat engine that takes 1.00 mol of an ideal diatomic gas through the cycle shown in Fig. P20.39. Fig. P20.39: (a). Show that process ab is an isothermal compression. (b). During which process(es) of the cycle is heat absorbed by the gas?

> What is the thermal efficiency of an engine that operates by taking n moles of diatomic ideal gas through the cycle 1→ 2→ 3→ 4→ 1 shown in Fig. P20.38? Fig. P20.38: P 2 3 2po P

> Digesting fat produces 9.3 food calories per gram of fat, and typically 80% of this energy goes to heat when metabolized. (One food calorie is 1000 calories and therefore equals 4186 J.) The body then moves all this heat to the surface by a combination o

> A heat engine takes 0.350 mol of a diatomic ideal gas around the cycle shown in the pV-diagram of Fig. P20.36. Process 1→ 2 is at constant volume, process 2→ 3 is adiabatic, and process 3→ 1 is at a c

> A certain heat engine operating on a Carnot cycle absorbs 410 J of heat per cycle at its hot reservoir at 135°C and has a thermal efficiency of 22.0%. (a). How much work does this engine do per cycle? (b). How much heat does the engine waste each cycle

> A solid conductor has a cavity in its interior. Would the presence of a point charge inside the cavity affect the electric field outside the conductor? Why or why not? Would the presence of a point charge outside the conductor affect the electric field i

> An average sleeping person metabolizes at a rate of about 80 W by digesting food or burning fat. Typically, 20% of this energy goes into bodily functions, such as cell repair, pumping blood, and other uses of mechanical energy, while the rest goes to hea

> A small sphere with mass 4.00 × 10-6 kg and charge 5.00 × 10-8 C hangs from a thread near a very large, charged insulating sheet (Fig. P22.33). The charge density on the surface of the sheet is uniform and equal to -2.50 &Atilde

> You are designing a Carnot engine that has 2 mol of CO2 as its working substance; the gas may be treated as ideal. The gas is to have a maximum temperature of 527sC and a maximum pressure of 5.00 atm. With a heat input of 400 J per cycle, you want 300 J

> At time t = 0 a proton is a distance of 0.360 m from a very large insulating sheet of charge and is moving parallel to the sheet with speed 9.70 × 102 m/s. The sheet has uniform surface charge density 2.34 × 10-9 C/m2. What is the speed of the proton at

> In one experiment the electric field is measured for points at distances r from a uniform line of charge that has charge per unit length λ and length l, where l >> r. In a second experiment the electric field is measured for points at distances r from th

> (a). An insulating sphere with radius a has a uniform charge density

> A nonuniform, but spherically symmetric, distribution of charge has a charge density

> Repeat Problem 22.54, but now let the charge density of the slab be given by

> A slab of insulating material has thickness 2d and is oriented so that its faces are parallel to the yz-plane and given by the planes x = d and x = -d. The y- and z-dimensions of the slab are very large compared to d; treat them as essentially infinite.

> A nonuniform, but spherically symmetric, distribution of charge has a charge density r1r2 given as follows: where p(r) = po(1 - for r s R P(r) = 0 for r 2 R

> Because the charges on the electron and proton have the same absolute value, atoms are electrically neutral. Suppose that this is not precisely true, and the absolute value of the charge of the electron is less than the charge of the proton by 0.00100%.

> (a). How many excess electrons must be distributed uniformly within the volume of an isolated plastic sphere 30.0 cm in diameter to produce an electric field of magnitude 1390 N/C just outside the surface of the sphere? (b). What is the electric field a

> Using Thomson’s (outdated) model of the atom described in Problem 22.50, consider an atom consisting of two electrons, each of charge -e, embedded in a sphere of charge +2e and radius R. In equilibrium, each electron is a distance d fro

> Early in the 20th century, a leading model of the structure of the atom was that of English physicist J. J. Thomson (the discoverer of the electron). In Thomson’s model, an atom consisted of a sphere of positively charged material in wh

> An insulating hollow sphere has inner radius a and outer radius b. Within the insulating material the volume charge density is given by

> A solid conducting sphere with radius R carries a positive total charge Q. The sphere is surrounded by an insulating shell with inner radius R and outer radius 2R. The insulating shell has a uniform charge density

> Repeat Problem 22.45, but now let the outer shell have charge -2q. The inner shell still has charge +2q. Problem 22.45: A small conducting spherical shell with inner radius a and outer radius b is concentric with a larger conducting spherical shell wit

> A small conducting spherical shell with inner radius a and outer radius b is concentric with a larger conducting spherical shell with inner radius c and outer radius d (Fig. P22.45). The inner shell has total charge +2q, and the outer shell has charge +4

> A conducting spherical shell with inner radius a and outer radius b has a positive point charge Q located at its center. The total charge on the shell is -3Q, and it is insulated from its surroundings (Fig. P22.44). Fig. P22.44: (a). Derive expressio

> In a follow-up experiment, a charge of +40 pC was placed at the center of an artificial flower at the end of a 30-cmlong stem. Bees were observed to approach no closer than 15 cm from the center of this flower before they flew away. This observation sugg

> After one bee left a flower with a positive charge, that bee flew away and another bee with the same amount of positive charge flew close to the plant. Which diagram in Fig. P21.100 best represents the electric field lines between the bee and the flower?

> Two identical metal objects are mounted on insulating stands. Describe how you could place charges of opposite sign but exactly equal magnitude on the two objects.

> If you peel two strips of transparent tape off the same roll and immediately let them hang near each other, they will repel each other. If you then stick the sticky side of one to the shiny side of the other and rip them apart, they will attract each oth

> After a long day of driving you take a late-night swim in a motel swimming pool. When you go to your room, you realize that you have lost your room key in the pool. You borrow a powerful flashlight and walk around the pool, shining the light into it. The

> A series circuit has an impedance of 60.0 Ω and a power factor of 0.720 at 50.0 Hz. The source voltage lags the current. a. What circuit element, an inductor or a capacitor, should be placed in series with the circuit to raise its power factor? b. What

2.99

See Answer