Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781305116399
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 19, Problem 19.9CQ
To determine
Whether it is possible for two objects to be in thermal equilibrium if they are not in contact with each other.
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Chapter 19 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.1QQCh. 19 - Consider the following pairs of materials. Which...Ch. 19 - If you are asked to make a very sensitive glass...Ch. 19 - Two spheres are made of the same metal and have...Ch. 19 - A common material for cushioning objects in...Ch. 19 - On a winter day, you turn on your furnace and the...Ch. 19 - Markings to indicate length are placed on a steel...Ch. 19 - When a certain gas under a pressure of 5.00 106...Ch. 19 - If the volume of an ideal gas is doubled while its...Ch. 19 - The pendulum of a certain pendulum clock is made...
Ch. 19 - A temperature of 162F is equivalent to what...Ch. 19 - A cylinder with a piston holds 0.50 m3 of oxygen...Ch. 19 - What would happen if the glass of a thermometer...Ch. 19 - A cylinder with a piston contains a sample of a...Ch. 19 - Two cylinders A and B at the same temperature...Ch. 19 - A rubber balloon is filled with 1 L of air at 1...Ch. 19 - The average coefficient of linear expansion of...Ch. 19 - Suppose you empty a tray of ice cubes into a bowl...Ch. 19 - A hole is drilled in a metal plate. When the metal...Ch. 19 - On a very cold day in upstate New York, the...Ch. 19 - Common thermometers are made of a mercury column...Ch. 19 - A piece of copper is dropped into a beaker of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.3CQCh. 19 - Some picnickers stop at a convenience store to buy...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.5CQCh. 19 - Prob. 19.6CQCh. 19 - An automobile radiator is filled to the brim with...Ch. 19 - When the metal ring and metal sphere in Figure...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.9CQCh. 19 - Prob. 19.10CQCh. 19 - Prob. 19.1PCh. 19 - The temperature difference between the inside and...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.3PCh. 19 - Prob. 19.4PCh. 19 - Liquid nitrogen has a boiling point of 195.81C at...Ch. 19 - Death Valley holds the record for the highest...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.7PCh. 19 - The concrete sections of a certain superhighway...Ch. 19 - The active element of a certain laser is made of a...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.10PCh. 19 - A copper telephone wire has essentially no sag...Ch. 19 - A pair of eyeglass frames is made of epoxy...Ch. 19 - The Trans-Alaska pipeline is 1 300 km long,...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.14PCh. 19 - A square hole 8.00 cm along each side is cut in a...Ch. 19 - The average coefficient of volume expansion for...Ch. 19 - At 20.0C, an aluminum ring has an inner diameter...Ch. 19 - Why is the following situation impossible? A thin...Ch. 19 - A volumetric flask made of Pyrex is calibrated at...Ch. 19 - Review. On a day that the temperature is 20.0C, a...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.21PCh. 19 - Review. The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.23PCh. 19 - A sample of a solid substance has a mass m and a...Ch. 19 - An underground gasoline lank can hold 1.00 103...Ch. 19 - A rigid lank contains 1.50 moles of an ideal gas....Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.27PCh. 19 - Your father and your younger brother are...Ch. 19 - Gas is contained in an 8.00-L vessel al a...Ch. 19 - A container in the shape of a cube 10.0 cm on each...Ch. 19 - An auditorium has dimensions 10.0 m 20.0 m 30.0...Ch. 19 - The pressure gauge on a lank registers the gauge...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.33PCh. 19 - Prob. 19.34PCh. 19 - A popular brand of cola contains 6.50 g of carbon...Ch. 19 - In state-of-the-art vacuum systems, pressures as...Ch. 19 - An automobile tire is inflated with air originally...Ch. 19 - Review. To measure how far below the ocean surface...Ch. 19 - Review. The mass of a hot-air balloon and its...Ch. 19 - A room of volume V contains air having equivalent...Ch. 19 - Review. At 25.0 in below the surface of the sea,...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.42PCh. 19 - A cook puts 9.00 g of water in a 2.00-L pressure...Ch. 19 - The pressure gauge on a cylinder of gas registers...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.45APCh. 19 - A steel beam being used in the construction of a...Ch. 19 - A spherical steel ball bearing has a diameter of...Ch. 19 - A bicycle tire is inflated to a gauge pressure of...Ch. 19 - In a chemical processing plant, a reaction chamber...Ch. 19 - Why is the following situation impossible? An...Ch. 19 - A mercury thermometer is constructed as shown in...Ch. 19 - A liquid with a coefficient of volume expansion ...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.53APCh. 19 - Two metal bars are made of invar and a third bar...Ch. 19 - A student measures the length of a brass rod with...Ch. 19 - The density of gasoline is 730 kg/m3 at 0C. Its...Ch. 19 - A liquid has a density . (a) Show that the...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.58APCh. 19 - Review. A dock with a brass pendulum has a period...Ch. 19 - A bimetallic strip of length L is made of two...Ch. 19 - The rectangular plate shown in Figure P18.37 has...Ch. 19 - The measurement of the average coefficient of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.63APCh. 19 - A vertical cylinder of cross-sectional area A is...Ch. 19 - Review. Consider an object with any one of the...Ch. 19 - (a) Show that the density of an ideal gas...Ch. 19 - You are watching a new bridge being built near...Ch. 19 - You are watching a new bridge being built near...Ch. 19 - Review. (a) Derive an expression for the buoyant...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.70APCh. 19 - Starting with Equation 18.11, show that the total...Ch. 19 - Review. A steel wire and a copper wire, each of...Ch. 19 - Review. A steel guitar string with a diameter of...Ch. 19 - A cylinder is closed by a piston connected to a...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.75CPCh. 19 - A cylinder that has a 40.0-cm radius and is 50.0...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.77CPCh. 19 - Review. A house roof is a perfectly flat plane...Ch. 19 - A 1.00-km steel railroad rail is fastened securely...
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- A certain ideal gas has a molar specific heat of Cv = 72R. A 2.00-mol sample of the gas always starts at pressure 1.00 105 Pa and temperature 300 K. For each of the following processes, determine (a) the final pressure, (b) the final volume, (c) the final temperature, (d) the change in internal energy of the gas, (e) the energy added to the gas by heat, and (f) the work done on the gas. (i) The gas is heated at constant pressure to 400 K. (ii) The gas is heated at constant volume to 400 K. (iii) The gas is compressed at constant temperature to 1.20 105 Pa. (iv) The gas is compressed adiabatically to 1.20 105 Pa.arrow_forwardAt our distance from the Sun, the intensity of solar radiation is 1 370 W/m2. The temperature of the Earth is affected by the greenhouse effect of the atmosphere. This phenomenon describes the effect of absorption of infrared light emitted by the surface so as to make the surface temperature of the Earth higher than if it were airless. For comparison, consider a spherical object of radius r with no atmosphere at the same distance from the Sun as the Earth. Assume its emissivity is the same for all kinds of electromagnetic waves and its temperature is uniform over its surface. (a) Explain why the projected area over which it absorbs sunlight is r2 and the surface area over which it radiates is 4r2. (b) Compute its steady-state temperature. Is it chilly?arrow_forwardUnreasonable Results A meteorite 1.20 cm in diameter is so hot immediately after penetrating the atmosphere that it radiates 20.0 kW of power. (a) What is its temperature, if the surroundings are at 20.0C and it has an emissivity of 0.800? (b) What is unreasonable about this result? (c) Which premise or assumption is responsible?arrow_forward
- The thermal conductivities of human tissues vary greatly. Fat and skin have conductivities of about 0.20 W/m K and 0.020 W/m K, respectively, while other tissues inside the body have conductivities of about 0.50 W/m K. Assume that between the core region of the body and the skin sin face lies a skin layer of 1.0 mm, fat layer of 0.50 cm, and 3.2 cm of other tissues. (a) Find the R-factor for each of these layers, and the equivalent R-factor for all layers taken together, retaining two digits. (b) Find the rate of energy loss when the core temperature is 37C and the exterior temperature is 0C. Assume that both a protective layer of clothing and an insulating layer of unmoving air a absent, and a body area of 2.0 m2.arrow_forwardOn a cold winter day. you buy roasted chestnuts from a street vendor. Into the pocket of your down parka you put the change he gives you: coins constituting 9.00 g of copper at 12.0C. Your pocket already contains 14.0 g of silver coins at 30.0C. A short time later the temperature of the copper coins is 4.00C and is increasing at a rate of 0.500C/s. At this time, (a) what is the temperature of the silver coins and (b) at what rate is it changing?arrow_forwardA 3.00-g copper coin at 25.0C drops 50.0 m to the ground. (a) Assuming 60.0% of the change in gravitational potential energy of the coin-Earth system goes into increasing the internal energy of the coin, determine the coins final temperature. (b) Does the result depend on the mass of the coin? Explain.arrow_forward
- Review. A 670-kg meteoroid happens to be composed of aluminum. When it is far from the Earth, its temperature is 15.0C and it moves at 14.0 km/s relative to the planet. As it crashes into the Earth, assume the internal energy transformed from the mechanical energy of the meteoroid-Earth system is shared equally between the meteoroid and the Earth and all the material of the meteoroid rises momentarily to the same final temperature. Find this temperature. Assume the specific heat of liquid and of gaseous aluminum is 1 170 J/kg C.arrow_forwardEqual 0.400-kg masses of lead and tin at 60.0C are placed in 1.00 kg of water at 20.0C. (a) What is the equilibrium temperature of the system? (b) If an alloy is half lead and half tin by mass, what specific heat would you anticipate for the alloy? (c) How many atoms of tin NSn, are in 0.400 kg of tin, and how many atoms of lead NPb are in 0.400 kg of lead? (d) Divide the number NSn of tin atoms by the number NPb of lead atoms and compare this ratio with the specific heat of tin divided by the specific beat of lead. What conclusion can be drawn?arrow_forwardIf water with a mass mk at temperature Tk is poured into an aluminum cup of mass mA1 containing mass mc of water at Tc, where Tk Tc, what is the equilibrium temperature of the system?arrow_forward
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