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Now if all the heat had been absorbed by the air, you would have raised your 27.7 kg of air by about 50K
Buildings leak; they have to or atmospheric pressure variations would make them unworkable.
No. It leaves the room and raises the atmosphere by a tiny amount, doing work against gravity.
Must be a different room. The first one had a starting temperature of 283K and we were told to ignore the volume of the fireplace so it was reasonable to assume that the chimney was blocked.0.18 atmospheres is about the pressure of a 100 mph wind on a bluff body. The internal doors might object but your front door and any modern double-glazed windows won't be too fussed. Come to think of it, most internal doors open into the room so it wouldn't even blow open.Not that it's a problem as you would have switched off the heater and/or opened the window after about 200 seconds to avoid death.Moral: wear a woolly sweater or a fur coat in cold weather. It works for every other mammal and people who work outdoors.
How far can the temperature increase without changing volume of the room?
How much Alan's room would expand by under a pressure of something like 2 tons per square metre is anyone's guess.
According to some physicists, this radiative cooling is not part of thermodynamics.
People who require oxygen do not seal their houses.
Oh yes it is. The current flow through the resistive hot dog generates heat which disperses through conduction, convection and radiation. At the primary contact points it gets hot enough (due to high local current density) to evaporate the sausage and generate a plasma which radiates all sorts of e.m. including visible light and possibly some ultraviolet.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 16/08/2024 15:40:18How much Alan's room would expand by under a pressure of something like 2 tons per square metre is anyone's guess.Not a lot. It's pretty close to the pressure difference between an airliner cabin and the ambient at 30,000 ft, and those structures rarely fall apart.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 16/08/2024 15:40:18People who require oxygen do not seal their houses.We all live in a yellow submarine....chorus:...and we keep the windows open....
Sky of blue (Sky of blue) and sea of green
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 09/08/2024 09:34:22According to some physicists, this radiative cooling is not part of thermodynamics.https://youtube.com/shorts/WerKkrkuwHg?feature=sharedThe way they cook the hot dog is not covered by thermodynamics either.
//www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrefqqirklYMagnifying The World's Brightest Flashlight (200,000 Lumens)This video can give some reality checks for our current understanding of temperature.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 19/08/2024 12:48:59Sky of blue (Sky of blue) and sea of greenHow do you know if you haven't got windows?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 19/08/2024 11:23:17Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 09/08/2024 09:34:22According to some physicists, this radiative cooling is not part of thermodynamics.https://youtube.com/shorts/WerKkrkuwHg?feature=sharedThe way they cook the hot dog is not covered by thermodynamics either. Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/07/2024 07:35:07//www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrefqqirklYMagnifying The World's Brightest Flashlight (200,000 Lumens)This video can give some reality checks for our current understanding of temperature.In this case, the flashlight is cooler than the burning paper. Yet the energy flows from the flashlight to the paper.
It's not an equilibrium system. It doesn't really have a well defined temperature.
No. The color temperature of the photons is about 4000 K.
Thermodynamics is all about heat flow, and you don't get flow in an equilibrium system....
Thermodynamics is a branch of physics that deals with heat, work, and temperature, and their relation to energy, entropy, and the physical properties of matter and radiation. The behavior of these quantities is governed by the four laws of thermodynamics, which convey a quantitative description using measurable macroscopic physical quantities, but may be explained in terms of microscopic constituents by statistical mechanics. Thermodynamics applies to a wide variety of topics in science and engineering, especially physical chemistry, biochemistry, chemical engineering and mechanical engineering, but also in other complex fields such as meteorology.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermodynamics