Chapter 12 Flashcards
Define Thermal energy
is the energy stored in matter, composed of the potential and kinetic energies of the molecules as they move.
Define Temperature
is the measure of the average thermal energy per molecule
Bathtub example:
= If you come in from a very cold day (i.e., you have frostbite, you will warm up much more by soaking in a cool bathtub than by drinking a cup of hot chocolate. Although the temperature of the water in the bathtub is much lower than the temperature of the hot chocolate, the water has much more thermal energy to transfer to your body than the cup does because there are so many more molecules.
Measuring temperature symbol:
T
The first standard scale: the Fahrenheit scale.
(1714 → Daniel Fahrenheit, a German Physicist) → Fresh water freezes at 32° & boils at 212°; room temperature ~ 68-70°
@Réaumur
(1731 → Rene Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur, French Scientist) → Fresh water freezes at 0° & boils at 80° → This scale is no longer in use, and you don’t need to know about it.
® Celsius.
(1741 → Anders Celsius, Swedish Astronomer) → It is also called “centigrade” “, meaning “100 divisions” → Fresh water freezes at 0° & boils at 100°; room temperature ~ 20-21° (Celsius actually set it up in the reverse order, with 0° being the boiling point and 100° being the freezing point. This was reversed after his death in 1744.)
Relation between Celsius and Fahrenheit:
F= 9/5C+32° or C=5/9 (F-32°) Also, -40° F = -40° C
®Kelvin
(1848 → British Mathematician and Physicist Lord Kelvin (real name William Thomson)- As an object’s temperature drops, the Ek of the molecules decreases. At -273.15° C, all motion of the molecules ceases. It is impossible to have a temperature lower than this. The Kelvin scale calls this point 0. (i.e., this is called absolute zero because it is the lowest possible temp.). - A division in the Kelvin scale, (simply called a “kelvin”, not a “degree Kelvin”) equals a degree division in the Celsius scale, so, 0° C = 273.15 K * Note: no “degree” symbol when measuring in K. → Fresh water freezes at 273 K & boils at 373 K; room temperature ~ 293 K - in 2003, physicists at MIT cooled sodium gas to a temperature of 500 pk. (Half a-billionth of a degree above absolute zero.)
Absolute zero
lowest possible temp, all motion of the molecules ceases.
© Rankine
(1859 → William John Macquorn Rankine, Scottish Engineer and Physicist) - Same scale as the Fahrenheit scale, but with 0° being absolute zero. (The same as -459.67° F) → Fresh water freezes at 491.67° R & boils at 671.67° R. (You don’t need to know about this one either.)
Difference between “heat” and “thermal energy”.
→ Thermal energy is what every object has, whereas “heat” is specifically the energy that transfers from a hotter object to a cooler object.
— To raise the temperature of an object, the amount of heat energy needed depends on:
- Mass of the object (i.e., the number of molecules)
- Desired temperature change
- Specific heat capacity of the substance → higher specific heat means it takes more energy to increase the temperature → high specific heat also means it gives off a lot of energy as it cools a small amount
Symbol for heat energy:
Q
Units for heat energy:
joules (like all energy)