Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
st
1
Introduction, and
Topic: Temperature!
Modern Physics
August 29, 2016
1
Syllabus and Website
| http://www.albany.edu/physics/phy240.shtml
| One more item that I was only reminded of this
morning: TO CONTINUE AS A PHYSICS MAJOR
YOU NEED TO GET A GRADE OF C OR HIGHER IN
THIS COURSE (NEW POLICY. STRICTLY ENFORCED)
| Everything will be posted OR e-mailed. So, for
note-taking, you only take notes on the “missing
bits.” Most of the time just sit and LISTEN TO ME
2
Extra Credit: Forgot
| Attendance at the weekly departmental
seminars and colloquia (note, free food :)
| Graduate student seminars: 3pm Tuesdays in
Room 129 (first floor lecture room)
| Physics colloquia: 3pm Fridays also in 129
| I am sorry if you can’t make either of these,
but remember this is bonus not required so I
am not obligated to make it possible for all
| Up to a maximum of 5% credit *on your final
grade* so that is a lot (1% per attendance)
3
Grading System
| >90% is an A (informal A+ included)
| 80-90% is a B
| 70-80% is a C
| 60-70% is a D
| <60% is an E
| Broken down into +’s and –’s by thirds in
each range
| Will curve only if needed
{ I will not allow: many E’s, few A’s
4
Course Overview 1
| In Physics 140/150, you learned about Newtonian
Mechanics, and Electricity & Magnetism
| In this course, we will focus on the physics which
came about in the late 19th century and during the
early 20th century
| At some point in the 1800’s, a noted physicist had
remarked -> “There is nothing new left to discover in
Physics – we just have to refine our measurements”
{
Was he wrong or what??!!
| Evidence was beginning to gather to imply that there
problems
{
The behavior of electromagnetic waves when
viewed from a moving frame
{
Lack of understanding about blackbody radiation
5
| Investigations into these led to relativity and QM
Course Overview 2
| Special Relativity
{ What happens when speeds become very
large, v ~ c, the speed of light
| Quantum Mechanics (QM)
{ What happens when objects get very small,
e.g., atoms, electrons, protons, et al.
| What we canNOT cover
{ Relativistic quantum mechanics: gives a
natural explanation for anti-particles (a.k.a.
Quantum Field Theory – graduate level)
| What we can only cover a little, given time
{ General relativity: Einstein’s explanation of
gravity (dedicated6course)
Thermodynamics
| In this unit, we will deal with cases where the
temperature, or the state of a system (whether it is
solid/liquid/gas), changes due to energy transfers
into or out of it
{
This field deals with how everyday phenomena such
as cooling in a refrigerator occurs, etc.
| In this unit, we will cover topics such as temperature,
the (0th/1st/2nd/3rd) laws of thermodynamics, entropy,
the kinetic theory of gases, etc.
| I will be using notes and other resources for this unit
{
Both will be available online and/or by email
| Thermodynamics essentially sheds light on
macroscopic properties of systems, which arise from
the internal structure such as atoms and molecules,
7
without getting bogged down
in little details
Temperature 1
| What is temperature, and what does it measure?
| If you stand with one foot on a wooden floor and the
other on a metal floor, what do you feel?
{
Is one “cooler” than the other? Why? Are they not
both at the same temperature?
{
Eventually, both of your feet will “feel” the same.
What is going on here? Have you wondered?
{
When objects are in thermal contact, energy flows
between them (on a hot summer day, hold an ice
cube to your forehead)
Not a
reliable
| Essentially, what you sense is the rate at which energy
measureis transferred into or out of your foot
ment
| When energy is no longer being transferred between
two objects, they are said to be in thermal
EQUILIBRIUM (I’ll highlight8important jargon in CAPS)
Temperature 2
| If two objects in thermal contact have the same
temperature, no energy will flow between them
{ They will be in thermal equilibrium
| So, one can think of temperature as the
property of a system that determines whether it
is in thermal equilibrium with others or not
{ Energy always flows from hotter to cooler
| A thermometer is an instrument that measures
the temperature of a system
{ There are many ways to do this => we shall return
to that later on in this course
{ Units: Fahrenheit, Celsius/Centigrade, Kelvin
9
Temperature Scales
| 0 Kelvin (the *absolute* scale, in SI system)
{ Is -273.15 degrees C and -459.67 degrees F
| 0 degrees Celsius (metric system nations)
{ Is +273.15 K (no degrees) and 32 degrees F
{ Water freezes
| 100 degrees Celsius (reason “Centigrade”)
{ Is +373.15 K and 212 degrees F
{ Water boils, at 14.7 psi pressure (or, 1 atm)
| Let’s work out two examples on the board
10
Problems 1 and 2
| To convert from degrees Celsius into Kelvin,
we just add/subtract… what?
| For degrees Celsius into degrees Farenheit,
we use the formula... (derive if don’t know)
11
Thermal Expansion 1
| As temperature increases, solids and liquids
expand
{ This is why (most) train tracks leave a little
gap between adjacent units
| We will see later what this really means
{ But for now, you can simply think of this as
the space between atoms increasing
| Solids: coefficients of expansion
{ Linear: alpha = ( deltaL / Li ) / deltaT, i.e.,
relative change in length divided by change
in temperature
{ Volume: beta = ( delta-V / Vi ) / deltaT (one
can relate alpha and
beta). (Area too)
12
Thermal Expansion 2
Aluminum
Lead
Glass
Steel
Brass
alpha(°C^-1)
24x10^-6
29x10^-6
9x10^-6
11x10^-6
19x10^-6
Similarly, we have values for beta
(mainly for fluids)
beta_Mercury = 1.8 x 10^-4 (°C^-1)
beta_Air (@ 0°C) = 3.7 x 10^-3
(Expansion of mercury was used in
old thermometers to see if you have
a fever!!)
| In general we use the Kelvin scale, though
when we have deltaT in the calculations,
then that is equivalent to using the Celsius
scale. (Makes sense?)
| Time for another in-class example
13
Problems 1 and 2
| A steel railroad track has L = 30.0 m @ 0°C.
What is its length @ 30°C?
| At which temperature will the two example
steel and brass bolts touch?
Steel
L_B = 0.030 m
L_S = 0.010 m
Brass
5 um
@27°C
14
Bimetallic Strips
An example of how the property of thermal expansion/contraction is exploited in real life.
Thermostat with bimetal coil at (2)
15
Solid and Liquids
| Generally expand when heated. (Cold!)
water is a significant exception, however!
| rho (density) = M / V, where M is mass and V
is volume
{ So, if M is constant (conserved quantity) and
volume increases, then rho will decrease
The density of water is at a
maximum at 4 degrees C
16
This phenomenon explains
why even when a pond
surface freezes in the water,
there is usually cold water at
the bottom, which allows
plants/animals to survive!!
Ideal Gas
| For solids or liquids, beta = ( deltaV / Vi ) /
deltaT
| However, for a gas what is the initial volume?
{ It depends on the container
Imagine
pumping the
{
same amount
of air into a
bicycle tire
versus a car
tire
You can put the same mass of gas in a small
container or a large one, and their volumes
will be different, but so will be the pressure &
the temperature
| For gases then, we must deal with P, V, and T
{ An equation of state relates these 3 quantities
| In general, relationship can be very
complicated but, as usual, we start with
simple assumptions 17
Equation of State
| Assumptions
Such a gas does not exist in real
life, but this is a useful starting point
{ T is neither too high, nor too low
{ P is low
{ Gas atoms do not interact with each other
except via collisions
{ Molecular volume is << size of container
| We use moles to represent the amount of
gas with which we are dealing
| The number of moles n = m / M, where m is
For H -> M mass and M is molar mass, i.e., atomic mass
= 1 g / mol
{ So, 1 mole of a gas has a mass equal to the
He -> ~4 g
atomic mass and contains 6.022 x 1023 atoms
O -> ~16 g
(Avogadro’s number,
or, NA)
18
Ar -> ~40...
Ideal Gas Law
| For an ideal gas, we have (from experiment)
| P V = n R T
{ Where P is the pressure (SI
unit
Pascal = 1 N / m^2)
{ V is volume (m^3)
{ n is #moles
{ T is temperature (in Kelvin)
{ R is a constant = 8.314 J / ( mol * K)
| Joules = N * m
L is liters and atm is unit of Pressure
| Alternate: 0.082 L * atm / ( mol * K )
| P V = ( N / NA ) * R * T = N * kB * T
19
{ Boltzmann’s constant = R/NA = 1.38x10-23 J/K
Problems 1 and 2
| Think about why soda spews out of a bottle,
if you shake it, and then open it up? (We will
return to this for the kinetic theory of gases.)
P0 = atmospheric pressure
mass = m
h
The gas is at pressure P
and temperature T
and contains n moles
area = A
| We want to know the height h at which the
20
piston will be in equilibrium
(Hint: equalize F)
Homework
| Read PDF attached to course webpage
21