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Question: A steel cylinder with rigid walls is

A steel cylinder with rigid walls is evacuated to a high degree of vacuum; you then put a small amount of helium into the cylinder. The cylinder has a pressure gauge that measures the pressure of the gas inside the cylinder. You place the cylinder in various temperature environments, wait for thermal equilibrium to be established, and then measure the pressure of the gas. You obtain these results:
A steel cylinder with rigid walls is evacuated to a high degree of vacuum; you then put a small amount of helium into the cylinder. The cylinder has a pressure gauge that measures the pressure of the gas inside the cylinder. You place the cylinder in various temperature environments, wait for thermal equilibrium to be established, and then measure the pressure of the gas. You obtain these results:


(a). Recall (Chapter 17) that absolute zero is the temperature at which the pressure of an ideal gas becomes zero. Use the data in the table to calculate the value of absolute zero in C. Assume that the pressure of the gas is low enough for it to be treated as an ideal gas, and ignore the change in volume of the cylinder as its temperature is changed. 
(b). Use the coefficient of volume expansion for steel in Table 17.2 to calculate the percentage change in the volume of the cylinder between the lowest and highest temperatures in the table. Is it accurate to ignore the volume change of the cylinder as the temperature changes? Justify your answer.

Table 17.2:

(a). Recall (Chapter 17) that absolute zero is the temperature at which the pressure of an ideal gas becomes zero. Use the data in the table to calculate the value of absolute zero in C. Assume that the pressure of the gas is low enough for it to be treated as an ideal gas, and ignore the change in volume of the cylinder as its temperature is changed. (b). Use the coefficient of volume expansion for steel in Table 17.2 to calculate the percentage change in the volume of the cylinder between the lowest and highest temperatures in the table. Is it accurate to ignore the volume change of the cylinder as the temperature changes? Justify your answer. Table 17.2:
A steel cylinder with rigid walls is evacuated to a high degree of vacuum; you then put a small amount of helium into the cylinder. The cylinder has a pressure gauge that measures the pressure of the gas inside the cylinder. You place the cylinder in various temperature environments, wait for thermal equilibrium to be established, and then measure the pressure of the gas. You obtain these results:


(a). Recall (Chapter 17) that absolute zero is the temperature at which the pressure of an ideal gas becomes zero. Use the data in the table to calculate the value of absolute zero in C. Assume that the pressure of the gas is low enough for it to be treated as an ideal gas, and ignore the change in volume of the cylinder as its temperature is changed. 
(b). Use the coefficient of volume expansion for steel in Table 17.2 to calculate the percentage change in the volume of the cylinder between the lowest and highest temperatures in the table. Is it accurate to ignore the volume change of the cylinder as the temperature changes? Justify your answer.

Table 17.2:





Transcribed Image Text:

T (°C) Р (Ра) Normal boiling point of nitrogen -195.8 254 Ice-water mixture 0.0 890 Outdoors on a warm day 33.3 999 Normal boiling point of water 100.0 1214 Hot oven 232 1635 Solids B [K-! or (C°)-'] Liquids B [K-l or (C°)-'] 7.2 x 10-5 6.0 x 10-5 Aluminum Ethanol 75 x 10-5 Brass Carbon disulfide 115 x 10-5 Сорper 5.1 x 10-5 Glycerin 49 x 10-5 Mercury 1.2-2.7 x 10-5 0.27 x 10-5 Glass 18 x 10-5 Invar Quartz (fused) 0.12 x 10-5 Steel 3.6 x 10-5


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> In addition to the normal cooking directions printed on the back of a box of rice, there are also “high-altitude directions.” The only difference is that the “high-altitude directions” suggest increasing the cooking time and using a greater volume of boi

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> In coastal regions in the winter, the temperature over the land is generally colder than the temperature over the nearby ocean; in the summer, the reverse is usually true. Explain. (Hint: The specific heat of soil is only 0.2–0.8 times as great as that o

> When a freshly baked apple pie has just been removed from the oven, the crust and filling are both at the same temperature. Yet if you sample the pie, the filling will burn your tongue but the crust will not. Why is there a difference? (Hint: The filling

> A jet airplane is flying at a constant altitude at a steady speed vS greater than the speed of sound. Describe what observers at points A, B, and C hear at the instant shown in Fig. Q16.25, when the shock wave has just reached point B. Explain. Fig. Q16

> When you first step out of the shower, you feel cold. But as soon as you are dry you feel warmer, even though the room temperature does not change. Why?

> Does an aircraft make a sonic boom only at the instant its speed exceeds Mach 1? Explain.

> Old-time kitchen lore suggests that things cook better (evenly and without burning) in heavy cast-iron pots. What desirable characteristics do such pots have?

> If you wait at a railroad crossing as a train approaches and passes, you hear a Doppler shift in its sound. But if you listen closely, you hear that the change in frequency is continuous; it does not suddenly go from one high frequency to another low fre

> Desert travelers sometimes keep water in a canvas bag. Some water seeps through the bag and evaporates. How does this cool the water inside the bag?

> Why is a hot, humid day in the tropics generally more uncomfortable for human beings than a hot, dry day in the desert?

> Before giving you an injection, a physician swabs your arm with isopropyl alcohol at room temperature. Why does this make your arm feel cold? (Hint: The reason is not the fear of the injection! The boiling point of isopropyl alcohol is 82.40C.)

> A steel tank is completely filled with 1.90 m3 of ethanol when both the tank and the ethanol are at 32.0°C. When the tank and its contents have cooled to 18.0°C, what additional volume of ethanol can be put into the tank?

> A large church has part of the organ in the front of the church and part in the back. A person walking rapidly down the aisle while both segments are playing at once reports that the two segments sound out of tune. Why?

> The climate of regions adjacent to large bodies of water (like the Pacific and Atlantic coasts) usually features a narrower range of temperature than the climate of regions far from large bodies of water (like the prairies). Why?

> Two loudspeakers, A and B, are driven by the same amplifier and emit sinusoidal waves in phase. The frequency of the waves emitted by each speaker is 860 Hz. Point P is 12.0 m from A and 13.4 m from B. Is the interference at P constructive or destructive

> An organist in a cathedral plays a loud chord and then releases the keys. The sound persists for a few seconds and gradually dies away. Why does it persist? What happens to the sound energy when the sound dies away?

> A small metal band is slipped onto one of the tines of a tuning fork. As this band is moved closer and closer to the end of the tine, what effect does this have on the wavelength and frequency of the sound the tine produces? Why?

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> If the pressure amplitude of a sound wave is halved, by what factor does the intensity of the wave decrease? By what factor must the pressure amplitude of a sound wave be increased in order to increase the intensity by a factor of 16? Explain.

> Which has a more direct influence on the loudness of a sound wave: the displacement amplitude or the pressure amplitude? Explain.

> Two bodies made of the same material have the same external dimensions and appearance, but one is solid and the other is hollow. When their temperature is increased, is the overall volume expansion the same or different? Why?

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> Lane dividers on highways sometimes have regularly spaced ridges or ripples. When the tires of a moving car roll along such a divider, a musical note is produced. Why? Explain how this phenomenon could be used to measure the car’s speed.

> In a popular and amusing science demonstration, a person inhales helium and then his voice becomes high and squeaky. Why does this happen? (Warning: Inhaling too much helium can cause unconsciousness or death.)

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> If you heat the air inside a rigid, sealed container until its Kelvin temperature doubles, the air pressure in the container will also double. Is the same thing true if you double the Celsius temperature of the air in the container? Explain.

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> The statistical quantities “average value” and “root-mean-square value” can be applied to any distribution. Figure P18.82 shows the scores of a class of 150 students on a 100-point q

> The vapor pressure of water (see Exercise 18.44) decreases as the temperature decreases. The table lists the vapor pressure of water at various temperatures: Exercise 18.44: The vapor pressure is the pressure of the vapor phase of a substance when it i

> You blow across the open mouth of an empty test tube and produce the fundamental standing wave of the air column inside the test tube. The speed of sound in air is 344 m/s and the test tube acts as a stopped pipe. (a). If the length of the air column in

> A vertical cylinder of radius r contains an ideal gas and is fitted with a piston of mass m that is free to move (Fig. P18.79). The piston and the walls of the cylinder are frictionless, and the entire cylinder is placed in a constant-temperature bath. T

> Calculate the integral in Eq. (18.30), 0 ∞

> (a) Explain why in a gas of N molecules, the number of molecules having speeds in the finite interval v to v +

> (a). Calculate the total rotational kinetic energy of the molecules in 1.00 mol of a diatomic gas at 300 K. (b). Calculate the moment of inertia of an oxygen molecule (O2) for rotation about either the y- or z-axis shown in Fig. 18.18b. Treat the molecu

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> You blow up a spherical balloon to a diameter of 50.0 cm until the absolute pressure inside is 1.25 atm and the temperature is 22.0°C. Assume that all the gas is N2, of molar mass 28.0 g/mol. (a). Find the mass of a single N2 molecule. (b). How much tr

> Helium gas is in a cylinder that has rigid walls. If the pressure of the gas is 2.00 atm, then the root-mean-square speed of the helium atoms is vrms = 176 m/s. By how much (in atmospheres) must the pressure be increased to increase the vrms of the He at

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> Estimate the number of atoms in the body of a 50-kg physics student. Note that the human body is mostly water, which has molar mass 18.0 g/mol, and that each water molecule contains three atoms.

> During your mechanical engineering internship, you are given two uniform metal bars A and B, which are made from different metals, to determine their thermal conductivities. Measuring the bars, you determine that both have length 40.0 cm and uniform cros

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2.99

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