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In practice, it's hard to get 100% ice or 100% water at exactly 0°C.
Will the energy transfer suddenly stop?
If it takes an hour to notice any melting, but the fluctuations only last a nanosecond, will you notice any melting due to the fluctuations?What I really can't understand is how you didn't realise that this was important.
ES Said: Sadly, that's still a minor issue. Work, pΔV, is done on a system if there's a volume change ΔV while maintaining constant pressure p.Hamdani replied: Where does the energy come from, and where does it go to?
Here is what I found in Wikipedia. Does it also apply to liquid and solid?Quote (Integral formula appeared here)
We will notice the melting and freezing after the imbalanced fluctuations accumulate in both sides.
Not really. Get some ice, a little below freezing , put it in a closed container and put that in a slurry of crushed ice and water.It will warm up to exactly 0CGet some water, just above freezing, Seal it in a container and put it in a slurry of ice and water, it will cool down to exactly 0C.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/03/2022 12:35:15Not really. Get some ice, a little below freezing , put it in a closed container and put that in a slurry of crushed ice and water.It will warm up to exactly 0CGet some water, just above freezing, Seal it in a container and put it in a slurry of ice and water, it will cool down to exactly 0C.What's hard is getting the left compartment filled with pure ice while the right compartment contains pure water. We will need to maintain air temperature at 0°C, so is the tools we use to transport the water and ice. The lighting should also be taken into account, as well as body temperature of the experimenter.
It is easy.You do everything in a tank of ice cold water.
Otherwise, someone must have done it already
This sort of experiment has been done hundreds of times, to establish the triple point and phase diagram of water.
How are the results?
Are they consistent with each other?
Does the ice side still free from water, and the water side free from ice?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 25/03/2022 04:40:26Otherwise, someone must have done it alreadyHow the **** do you think we know what the melting point of water is?Messieurs Laplace and Lavoisier didn't video it, because they did the experiment in 1782.https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ice-calorimeter-developed-by-lavoisier-and-laplace-14898943/
A rotating magnet and an aluminum disk can have the same initial temperature. But when they are brought close to each other, some temperature increase is observed on the aluminum disk.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 23/03/2022 14:07:32A rotating magnet and an aluminum disk can have the same initial temperature. But when they are brought close to each other, some temperature increase is observed on the aluminum disk.because you are supplying energy to rotate the magnet. If you don't, no heat is generated.
What if it's the aluminum disk which was initially rotating,
My point is that equality in temperature doesn't guarantee the absent of energy transfer, especially when some other forms of energy are involved.
What if it's the aluminum disk which was initially rotating, while the magnet was stationary?
Similar case would happen if the aluminum disk was attached to a spring and vibrate at resonance frequency.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 27/03/2022 22:44:50Similar case would happen if the aluminum disk was attached to a spring and vibrate at resonance frequency.What if the magnet is replaced by an electret?