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Conceptual questions

What three factors affect the heat transfer that is necessary to change an object’s temperature?

The brakes in a car increase in temperature by Δ T size 12{ΔT} {} when bringing the car to rest from a speed v size 12{v} {} . How much greater would Δ T size 12{ΔT} {} be if the car initially had twice the speed? You may assume the car to stop sufficiently fast so that no heat transfers out of the brakes.

Problems&Exercises

On a hot day, the temperature of an 80,000-L swimming pool increases by 1 . 50ºC size 12{1 "." "50"°C} {} . What is the net heat transfer during this heating? Ignore any complications, such as loss of water by evaporation.

5 . 02 × 10 8 J size 12{5 "." "02" times "10" rSup { size 8{8} } `J} {}

Show that 1 cal/g ºC = 1 kcal/kg ºC size 12{1`"cal/g" cdot °C=1`"kcal/kg" cdot °C} {} .

To sterilize a 50.0-g glass baby bottle, we must raise its temperature from 22 . 0 ºC to 95 . C . How much heat transfer is required?

3. 07 × 10 3 J

The same heat transfer into identical masses of different substances produces different temperature changes. Calculate the final temperature when 1.00 kcal of heat transfers into 1.00 kg of the following, originally at 20 . C : (a) water; (b) concrete; (c) steel; and (d) mercury.

Rubbing your hands together warms them by converting work into thermal energy. If a woman rubs her hands back and forth for a total of 20 rubs, at a distance of 7.50 cm per rub, and with an average frictional force of 40.0 N, what is the temperature increase? The mass of tissues warmed is only 0.100 kg, mostly in the palms and fingers.

0 . 171º C size 12{0 "." "171"°C} {}

A 0.250-kg block of a pure material is heated from 20 . C size 12{"20" "." 0°C} {} to 65 . C size 12{"65" "." 0°C} {} by the addition of 4.35 kJ of energy. Calculate its specific heat and identify the substance of which it is most likely composed.

Suppose identical amounts of heat transfer into different masses of copper and water, causing identical changes in temperature. What is the ratio of the mass of copper to water?

10.8

(a) The number of kilocalories in food is determined by calorimetry techniques in which the food is burned and the amount of heat transfer is measured. How many kilocalories per gram are there in a 5.00-g peanut if the energy from burning it is transferred to 0.500 kg of water held in a 0.100-kg aluminum cup, causing a 54 . C temperature increase? (b) Compare your answer to labeling information found on a package of peanuts and comment on whether the values are consistent.

Following vigorous exercise, the body temperature of an 80.0-kg person is 40 . C . At what rate in watts must the person transfer thermal energy to reduce the the body temperature to 37 . C in 30.0 min, assuming the body continues to produce energy at the rate of 150 W? 1 watt = 1 joule/second or 1 W = 1 J/s .

617 W

Even when shut down after a period of normal use, a large commercial nuclear reactor transfers thermal energy at the rate of 150 MW by the radioactive decay of fission products. This heat transfer causes a rapid increase in temperature if the cooling system fails ( 1 watt = 1 joule/second or 1 W = 1 J/s and 1 MW = 1 megawatt ) . (a) Calculate the rate of temperature increase in degrees Celsius per second ( ºC/s ) if the mass of the reactor core is 1 . 60 × 10 5 kg and it has an average specific heat of 0.3349 kJ/kgº C . (b) How long would it take to obtain a temperature increase of 2000º C , which could cause some metals holding the radioactive materials to melt? (The initial rate of temperature increase would be greater than that calculated here because the heat transfer is concentrated in a smaller mass. Later, however, the temperature increase would slow down because the 5 × 10 5 -kg steel containment vessel would also begin to heat up.)

The figure shows a view from above of a radioactive spent fuel pool inside a nuclear power plant.
Radioactive spent-fuel pool at a nuclear power plant. Spent fuel stays hot for a long time. (credit: U.S. Department of Energy)

Practice Key Terms 1

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Source:  OpenStax, Physics 105: adventures in physics. OpenStax CNX. Dec 02, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11916/1.1
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