Shown in the attachment is a system consisting of a heat pump and other components. My question is how I can approximate the total cooling effect in Watts available to the cooling battery. We know that the ground water is about 5 degrees, and I have some other data as well, just shout as I'm not...
I've got a project due this Friday whose objectives are no more than a single sentence: cooling tower improvements. This is for a thermal hydraulics class, so I thought I'd investigate the effects of different shapes of a hyperbolic cooling tower on heat flux q" through the walls of the tower...
http://motls.blogspot.com/2007/01/peer-reviewed-global-cooling.html
Just for a change.
<Edit by Moonbear: Here is a direct link to the article being discussed in the blog http://www.springerlink.com/content/g28u12g2617j5021/?p=77874d861902420aacca82524790dc89&pi=7 All discussion within the...
Homework Statement
A solar hot-water-heating system consists of a hot water tank and a solar panel. The tank is well insulated and has a time constant of 64 hr. The solar panel generates 2000 Btu/hr during the day, and the tank has a heat capacity of 2 degrees F per thousand Btu. If the...
I'm trying to understand the concept of free cooling. I've found that this is the production of chilled water without the use of chillers, i.e. the use of cool air. But what I don't get is that if the temperature outside is low, isn't the need for cooling pretty much not there? I only see this...
Homework Statement
A small object of unknown temperature was placed in a large room that had the fixed temperature 30 degrees C. After 10 minutes, the object's temperature is -10 degrees C, and after an additional 10 minutes, the object's temperature was -5 degrees C. What was the initial...
Consider an asteroid with an iron core (pc = 8000kg/m^3) covered by a thin silicate mantle (pm = 3400kg/m^3) with a thickness of 20% of the radius R of the asteroid. Assume that the internal temperature Ti = 600K is constant throughout the core. The thermal energy of the core is 3*k*Ti per...
Homework Statement
The equation dQ/dt = k ( T - Troom) is Newtons law of cooling. dQ/dT being the rate of heat loss. I want to convert this equation to dT/dt, the rate of temperature decay. How do i go about doing this?
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
Is Q...
What caused the universe, specifically the Earth, to cool after the big bang? Was it because of the space expansion and thus the relationship between wavelength and energy (as wavelength increases E drops?) or what? A basic answer is good =] Thanks.
Homework Statement
At 1:00 PM, a thermometer reading 70 degrees F is taken outside where the temperature is -10 degrees F (ten below zero). At 1:02PM, the reading is 26 degrees. At 1:05PM the thermometer is taken back indoors, where the air is at 70 degrees F. What is the temperature reading...
at 1 pm, a thermometer reading 70 F is taken outside where the air temperature is -10F (ten below zero). at 1:02 p.m., the reading is 26F. At 1:05 p., the thermometer is taken back indoors , where the air is at 70 F. What is the temperature reading at 1:09 pm?
Ive made a table like this...
Homework Statement
5 kg of lead shot at 97.9 °C are poured into 5 kg of water at 26.0 °C. Find the final temperature of the mixture. Use cwater = 4187 [(J)/(kg·° C)] and clead = 128 [(J)/(kg·° C)].
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
How do I start this?
Homework Statement
A smaller bowl of porridge served at 200 degres F cools to 160 degres in 1 min. What tempature (too cold) will this porridge be when the bowl of exercise 27 has reached 120 degres F (just right)?
Homework Equations
y(prime)(t)=k((y(t)-T sub a )
y(t)=Ae^(kt)+T sub a...
Homework Statement
A roast turkey is taken from an oven when its temperature has reached 185 degrees F and is placed on a table in a room where the temperature is 75 degrees F. When will the turkey have cooled to 100 degrees F?
Homework Equations
dT/dt=k(T-Ts) where Ts=temperature of...
Hi Physics forum,
I have a pipe which is of length L, inner diameter D. It is packed with CO2 at pressure P (assume it's still a gas with none of this funny supercritical business!) and temperature T. The density of the CO2 is rho and the joule-kelvin coefficient is mu. the pipe is initially...
Homework Statement
The time it takes for a deceased human body to reach room temperature.
Room temperature = 25 degrees C
Initial temperature of corpse = 37 degrees C
Homework Equations
I used Newton's law of cooling: \frac{dT}{dt} = -k(T - T_{room})
where T is a function of t(time in...
Hi.
I'm looking for a easy way of using heat to create cooling. I am trying to make a device that will use the heat from one place, to cool something in another place down. Maybe this is more for the engineer forum, but what I need to know first of all is the names of the processes. For the...
By passing warm air through a cotton sock acting as a wick immersed in water, how can I calculate the maximum evaporation to achieve the gratest temperature drop in the air flow? What is the typical formula for temperature drop in evaporative cooling models?
Hi,
I don't fully understand this thing. I've read it on wiki, but it just doesn't get through. Perhaps I am a dumbass.
I've 3 questions that hopefully will help clear it up.
1) How do you stop adiabatic cooling?
2) In a closed and insulated system where there is a compressed gas...
So everyone knows about this method of making ice cream, cooling drinks, w/e. You add salt to ice and it lowers the freezing/melting point and this cools things below 0C. I understand why the freezing point is lowered and all that but I don't understand why this cools things down faster. So...
I am aware that absolute zero can not be achieved by cooling a substance since absolute zero is zero-point energy. I was just wondering what is used (coolant wise and apparatus wise) to cool something near this temperature since there some experiments such as the Boise-Einstein Condensates which...
Homework Statement
"A cup of hot chocolate, in a room temperature of 21*C, cools accordiing to Newton's law of cooling. Determine the rate of cooling, k, of the hot chocolate if it cools from 86*C to 65*C in 15 minutes"
Homework Equations
Newton's cooling law, ln function
T-Ts=(T. -...
Hey, I'm having problems with this question:
According to Newton's law of cooling, what cools faster, a person from 150 degress celcius to 100 degrees celcius or 100 degrees celcius to 50 degrees celcius in a laboratory environment? Why?
I' not really sure where to start.
I know the...
Ok hi guys,
recently i was doing a practical on thermodynamics. Then i came across of a question which was to comment on the assumption that the rate of heat loss for 2 different liquids , placed in identical calorimetry copper cups was the same.( the 2 liquids started off at the same...
Ok hi guys,
recently i was doing a practical on thermodynamics. Then i came across of a question which was to comment on the assumption that the rate of heat loss for 2 different liquids , placed in identical calorimetry copper cups was the same.( the 2 liquids started off at the same...
Homework Statement
Bob loves vegetarian pizza. How long will it take Bob's pizza to cool to 110 degrees if he bakes it at 450 degrees for 20 minutes? The temperature in his house is a balmy 70 degrees.
Homework Equations
T(t) = Ts + Do*e^(-k*t) where...
Do = initial temperature...
Hi! My Physics introductory book states the following: "A dew point is a state defined by the temperature to which the air has to be cooled isobarically (with constant absolute humidity) for the vapour to become saturated."
Humidity is defined as m/V, where m is weight of the vapour, V is...
I really have no Idea where to start... Please help
Homework Statement
A monatomic gas is cooled by 50 C at constant volume by removing 830 J of energy. How many moles of the gas is in the sample.
Homework Equations
?Q=mc (delta)T
The Attempt at a Solution
I am not sure...
I have a problem where I have an air cooled condensing unit located in a large room within a building. The volume of the room is approximately 27,195 cubic feet. The air cooled condensing unit rejects 102,600 btu/hr to the space. Assuming the ambient air temperature of the space is 95 degrees...
I am trying to relate an object temperature as a function of time using Stefan's Law. Newton's law of cooling is,
\frac{dT}{dt}\; =\; k\left( T-R \right)
Where T is temp, t is time, k is a constant, and R is the temperature of the surroundings. Stefan's Law is,
P\; =\; e\sigma AT^{4}...
I have a question about Newton's Law of cooling. Basically I understand that the equation,
http://album6.snapandshare.com/3936/45466/853596.jpg
Comes from the DE, dT/dt = K(T-To)
Using this, I am to solve this problem:
A thermometer is taken from an inside room to the outside, where...
When a valve on a pneumatic tire (filled with compressed air) is released and the tire is allowed to deflate, one may notice that the valve stem will become quite cold during the process. A common, everyday observation. So far, so good.
The question is: What would we observe if the tire being...
Here is the situation: We have 100w heatload coming from little die which has only 1cm^2 of surface area. We cool it with Ln2 as cold as possible (in normal atmospheric pressure) by using simple round container which is made of 99.99% copper. Let's assume that system is perfectly isolated so all...
Hello,
I am currently engaged in an High School chemistry project. I was wondering if you guys could help me out.
The project itself is not required to be related to chemistry at all; it can be a physics/biology project as well. After some brainstorming, I have narrowed my topic down to...
Right now, we're doing thermal physics.
For one of our assignments, the teacher asked us to make our own experiment and write on a lab on it. For this lab, we had to investigate a question she gave us:
If water is left in a container open to the air, its temperature will drop below the...
Please move to appropriate forum if necessary.
I need some help. Attached is a pic of my standard 1/4hp Hayward pool pump. I want to enclose it to make it quieter. (The sound is being transmitted by air rather than by physical contact.)
As a "proof of concept" I stuffed it in a storage bin...
Sir,
It is said that a hollow sphere cools faster that a solid sphere. Is it because a hollow sphere contains smaller quantity of heat than the solid sphere? Or is it because the rate of heat loss is inversely proportional to thickness of the conductor through which heat is lost?
Sir,
Can you state an example for forced convection loss? Is Newton’s law of cooling also applicable to forced convection losses apart from natural convection losses?
Hello,
I am an undergrad student studying Physics.
We are currently studying thermodynamics. The lecturer has set us a bunch of problems relating to Thermodynamics. While I can do most of them, I am getting completely thrown by one question:
An object with a surface area of 0.2 m², an...
Hi folks,
I recently posted about one facet of a bizarre argument I've (stupidly) involved myself in in the solid state forum. Perhaps someone can help me out with the entropy side of things here.
Basically, the guy I'm speaking to has some bizarre ideas about a way to use a (single, or...
A few days ago i took a test on heat and temperature ect. One of the questions was : When we say evaporation is a cooling process, we are saying that: a. surrounding air is cool b. the liquid is cooled. I chose a. because i knew that evaporation draws in energy from air to evaporate cooling the...
In a cooling curve of a single substance there is a thermal arrest point where the liquid turns into solid. My laboratory manual mentions that in a cooling curve containing two liquids (A + B), in addition to the arrest there is a second point called a "break". It says the point at which solid A...
Hey Folks,
I was showing my students Newton's Law of cooling (precalc class) and one of my students pointed out that this doesn't really model the cooling of an object, he said that he had recently learned in chemistry that the temperature of the object that is cooling actually dips down...
Why do people try to get the lowest temperature possible on their CPU? Is the sole reason because as temperature decreases electrical resistance decreases, meaning less collisions of electrons, and then therefore less heat from kinetic energy? Would the limit of cooling the CPU be at zero...