Announcements 9/10/12 Prayer On Wednesday I will go back and regrade all of the
old clicker quizzes. As long as your clicker is registered by then, all of your quizzes will count. Check to make sure you have quiz scores on your grade printout!
Unregistered clickers from Friday: 971463E, 3368A2F9, C80BC30
Review: equipartition theorem & vrms
Calvin & Hobbes
Molecular View of Pressure Related problem: What is average pressure
by baseballs (m = 145 g) on a wall (A = 9 m2). Speed = 85 mph (38 m/s). Elastic collisions, each lasting for 0.05 seconds. (This is the time the ball is in contact with the wall.) A baseball hits the wall every 0.5 seconds.
Actual problem: a cube filled with gasa. Pressure on right wall from one molecule?
b. Pressure on right wall from all molecules
Answer: 2.45 Pa
Answer: 2mvx/(L2 tbetween hits) = mvx2/L3
Answer: P = Nmvx2/V
where we stopped
Molecular View of Pressure, cont.
Result for v instead of vx:
P = N m ⅓ v2 / V What does PV equal? Compare to: PV = N kB T What does v equal? What does T equal?
What is temperature? (revisited)
Demo
Demo: kinetic theory machine
“Heavy” vs. “light” molecules which ones move faster?
Clicker question: Which “molecules” have the most kinetic energy?
a. The heavy onesb. The light onesc. Same
From warmup
Extra time on?a. difference between vavg and vrms (many
people)– See HW problem 5.3
b. supercooling demo (3 people)– “a demonstration of supercooled water
would be "supercool” (ha ha)” Other comments?
a. Section 21.6. doesn't seem to exist in the Eighth Edition (several people)
From warmup
The last homework assignment (due friday) took me 5 hours because I could not figure out how to do 4-5. I eventually found an equation that worked...but it was kind of pure luck.
Characterizing velocities Recall bouncing balls in jar. Focus on one
type of molecule. Lots of questions, such as :
a. What’s the average velocity? b. What’s the most popular velocity?c. What’s the velocity that corresponds to
the average kinetic energy?d. How many molecules have velocities
within a given range?How to answer: use statistical distributions, aka histograms
Height Histogram: Class of 49 students
Round heights to closest integer, plot histogram
What is the combined area of all bars?
If I pick a student at random, what are chances he/she will be 68 inches tall?
What is the area of the bar at 68 inches divided by the total area?
How many students will be exactly 68.000000 inches tall?
If I pick a student at random, what are chances he/she will be 61.5-64.5 inches tall?
What is average height of all students? (At least, how would you figure that out?)
“Normalized” Histogram: Total students = 49 y-axis now divided by
total # of students. What is combined
area of all bars? If I pick a student at
random, what are chances he/she will be 61.5-64.5 inches tall? (At least, how would you figure that out?)
How many students have heights between 61.5 and 64.5 inches?
What is average height of all students?
Probability Distribution Function
Imagine total # = 10 billion. Tiny “bins”. Connect peaks of curve with line… becomes a function
If I pick a person at random, what are chances he/she will be 63.6-67.2 inches tall?
How many people have heights between 63.6 and 67.2 inches?
What is average height of all people? (If a non-symmetric curve, this is not just the peak of the curve.)
Velocity Distribution: “Maxwell-Boltzmann”
2122( ) Bmv k Tf v v e
with some constants out in front to normalize it
Where does this eqn come from? Wait a few weeks.
Warmup: What is difference between vave, vrms, and vmp? Why is vmp the smallest of the three velocities?v-rms, the root-mean-square, based on the overall translational kinetic energy of the gas, while v-avg is the statistical average of the speed of all the particles, and v-mp is the "most probable" or the statistical mode of the speeds (the highest point on the distribution graph). v-mp is the smallest because the graph is skewed to the left
From warmup
Answer: V_ave is just the regular average: add up the speeds and divide by number of particles. V_rms is "root mean square": add up the *squares* of the velocities, divide by the number of particles, then take the square root. It corresponds to the speed of the average kinetic energy. V_mp is the "most probable" velocity: the peak of the speed histogram. V_mp is the smallest because the distribution of speeds is skewed to the right--the peak in Fig. 21.11 (7th edition) is decidedly to the left of center.
Velocity Distribution: “Maxwell-Boltzmann”
At 600K, how many molecules with speeds between 400 and 600 m/s?
What is “vmost probable”? What is “vaverage”? What is “vrms”? How many molecules
are at exactly the “most probable” velocity?
2122( ) Bmv k Tf v v e
with some constants out in front to normalize it
Questions
Heat = not a fluid!
Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford, 1753-1814
a. Boiling water with a cannon
Image credit: Wikipedia
James Joule, 1818-1889
Image credit: Wikipedia
From warmup In terms that a lay person could easily
understand, explain what heat capacity is. Explain the difference between "heat capacity" and "specific heat". Why do we need both?
a. Heat capacity is the amount of energy that you need to increase a sample of whatever size by one degree Celsius while specific heat is the amount of energy needed to raise one kilogram of some substance by one degree Celsius.
Specific Heat
Q=mcT
Clicker question: If you add 500 J of
heat to a mass of water, and 500 J of heat to the same mass of copper, which one increases the most in temperature?
a. Waterb. Copperc. Same
Clicker question:
Thermal energy that is used to melt or freeze something is called:
a. latent heatb. mass heatc. melty heatd. molar heate. specific heat
From warmup:
In regions B and D, energy is being added but the temperature is constant. How can energy be added to a system and the temperature not change? Where is the energy going?
a. As I understand it, the energy is being spent in breaking apart particles that love each other too much to part their separate ways. Only after they have been broken down light enough to fly will they turn into steam.
Phase Changes
T
Heat energy added (Q)
100o C Water boils
0o C Ice melts
Ice warming
Ice melting
Water warming
Water boiling
Steam warming
Latent Heats
Demo
Boiling water with a vacuum
Clicker question: If you want to melt a cube of ice
that’s initially at -40C, you must first raise its temperature to 0C, and then you must melt it. Which part takes the most energy?
a. Raising the temperature b. Meltingc. Same
Calorimetry
Worked problem (class designed):____ grams of hot iron at _____ C is added to ____ g of water at _____ C in a styrofoam insulated container. What is the final temperature of the mixture? (Neglect the container.)
ciron = 448 J/kgC cwater = 4186 J/kgC Lwater-steam = 2.26 106 J/kg