``QUICKIES''
- (a)
- [1992 Xmas]
For an ideal gas the pressure and temperature are directly
related to one of the following velocities of the gas molecules
(underline the correct one): i most probable velocity;
(ii) average velocity; (iii) root-mean-square velocity;
(iv) maximum velocity.
- (b)
- [1994 Final]
A special constant-temperature rocket engine
heats up an ideal gas of ``fuel'' atoms of mass m
to a fixed temperature T
and allows them to escape through a small hole as ``exhaust.''
Which would impart a larger impulse to the
rocket payload - a fuel of hydrogen atoms
or the same total fuel mass of lead atoms?
(Remember, the average kinetic energy of ideal gas atoms
depends only on T and not on m.)
- (c)
- [1995 Final]
For an ideal gas of N particles in thermal equilibrium,
the mean internal energy depends on
[encircle all correct answers]
i temperature
(ii) pressure
(iii) volume
- (d)
- [1996 Final]
In the same room we have a mixture of helium gas, oxygen gas, etc.
What is the ratio of the helium average velocity to that of the oxygen
molecules?
- (e)
- [1997 Final]
For an ideal gas the pressure and temperature
are directly related to one of the following velocities
of the gas molecules: [underline one]
(i) most probable velocity;
(ii) average velocity; (iii) root-mean-square velocity;
(iv) maximum velocity.
[1993 P115 Xmas]
- (a)
- What are the two fixed points on the thermodynamic scale (constant
volume ideal gas thermometer scale)?
- (b)
- How much heat is required to warm 6.0 kg of ice (c=2220 J/kg-K) from
C to C (staying as ice)?
- (c)
- How much heat is given off if you freeze 0.3 kg of water initially at
C (c=4190 J/kg-K and L=333,000 J/kg)?
- (d)
- If 0.3 kg of water is dropped onto a 6 kg block of ice
at C, what is the final temperature when equilibrium is reached,
and how much ice and/or water is there?
States of Mind and the Heat of Thought [1995 Final]
Consider the following grossly over-simplified model:
A mind is a system
capable of N distinct thoughts,
of which only
are actually held in memory
at any given time. Any given thought is either
in memory or not; there is no middle ground.
Furthermore, each thought takes the same
amount of ``mental energy"
,
so that a mind with a total available mental energy U
will always have exactly
thoughts in memory.
A specific set of n thoughts can be considered one
``fully specified state of mind" for .
We shall make the further (rather insulting) assumption
that every possible fully specified state of mind
with n thoughts is a priori equally likely.
- (a)
- How many different fully specified
states with n thoughts could occupy a mind which has
``mental room" for N thoughts?
- (b)
- What is the entropy
of a mind which has the capacity for 12 thoughts
but currently contains only 4?
- (c)
- Explain how to define a mental temperature
for a given mind, assuming only that you know how
the number of possible fully specified states of that mind
depends on its total mental energy.
[The specific form of said dependence
need not be the one you gave above.]
- (d)
- If
,
which has very little mental energy U1
but a large mental temperature ,
is free to exchange thoughts with
,
which has enormous mental energy U2
but a small mental temperature ,
whose mental energy is most likely to increase?
Explain.
(Assume both are isolated mentally from the rest of the world.)
- (e)
- Now suppose that one particular mind is in ``mental equilibrium"
with the UBC intellectual community,
which we shall assume has a ``mental temperature"
of mJ.
If it takes that mind an extra mental energy of
mJ to have a given thought
(in addition to whatever other thoughts it might be having),
what is the probability of that specific thought
being present in that mind at any given time?
[1992 P115 Xmas]
A 180 g copper pot contains 200 litre of water at an initial temperature of
20C. A copper rod heated to 900 C is dropped into the water.
This causes the water to boil with 5.0 g of water converted to steam. What is
the mass of the copper rod?
Specific heat of copper = 386 J/kg.K
Specific heat of water = 4190 J/kg.K
Heat of vaporisation of water = 2256000 J/kg
[1992 P115 Xmas]
An igloo, a hemispherical enclosure built of ice, has an inner radius of
2.5 m . The thickness of the ice is 50 cm. On a cold winter day the outside
temperature is -40C.
At what rate must thermal energy be generated to maintain the
temperature inside the igloo at C?
Thermal conductivity of ice = 0.592 W/m
K
A quantity of gas (
)
expands adiabatically and quasi-statically
from an initial pressure of 2 atm and volume of 2
at temperature of
20C to twice its original volume.
- (a)
- What is the final pressure of the gas?
- (b)
- What is the final temperature of the gas?