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Temperature, Heat, and Laws of Thermodynamics. Kinetic Energy Tie In. There were _______ main types of kinetic energy that we went over. __________ KE __________ KE __________ KE __________ KE. _________ KE is when an object is moving forward.
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Kinetic Energy Tie In • There were _______ main types of kinetic energy that we went over. • __________ KE • __________ KE • __________ KE • __________ KE
_________ KE is when an object is moving forward. • _________ KE is when an object is spinning. • _________ KE is when the parts of something are moving together. • _________ KE is when an object is moving in a repetitive back and forth motion, like _______.
__________ and ________ KE happen on a _________ scale. • The ______ object moves from point A to point B. We covered most of that in the first half of the unit. • _________ KE happens on a smaller scale. • _________ KE happens mostly on a microscopic or molecular level.
We’ll mostly be looking at _______ KE for the rest of the unit. • ___________ is the measure of average kinetic energy of matter.
Temperature • We can say _________ is a measure of an object’s _______ or _______. • It is ______ a measure of heat. But it can be used as an indicator of heat or internal energy.
The ________ the molecules are vibrating and moving, the ________ the object feels. • This gives it a ________ temperature. • The ________ the molecules are vibrating and moving, the _______ the object feels. • This gives it a ________ temperature. • TL;DR – The _________ the _________ are moving, the _________ the temperature.
Another factor for temperature is how ______ the molecules are together. • Think about what happens during a ______ or ______ drill here at the school, or in your _______ classrooms.
The _______ the molecules, the more they’ll ________ _______ each other. • That ________ molecular friction and makes the temperature _________. • The _______ _______ the molecules, the ______ they’ll _______. • That ________ molecular friction, and makes the temperature _________
States of Matter • ______ have the most KE. They move freely and randomly. • Because they have more space to move, these molecules move with 100% _________ KE. • ______ are in between ______ and _______. • ______ have the least KE. The molecules are crammed very close together. • ______ molecules move with 100% ________ KE.
Measuring Temperature • We measure temperature with _______ different scales • ____________ • ____________ • ____________
Fahrenheit • ºF is the __________ ________ unit for measuring temperature. • Began by filling the thermometer with _______. • ºF can be ________ or _________. • Freezing point of water: __________. • Boiling point of water: __________.
Celsius • ºC is the _______ unit of measuring temperature. • Based off of thermometers filled with _______. • ºC can be ________ or _________. • Freezing point of water: _________ • Boiling point of water: ________
Kelvin • K (NEVER ºK) is the _________ unit of measuring temperature. • K uses the same increments as ________. • K measures the _________ of the __________. • __________ ________ - no molecular vibration. This is 0 K. • ______ has ever hit absolute zero. Even the _______ of _______ has 2.3 K.
Conversions! • Celsius and Fahrenheit • Celsius to Kelvin
Heat • The ________ of internal energy from one object to another. • _________ be directly measured. • Indicates __________ _________. • Temperature going down? Losing energy = ______ in heat. • Temperature going up? Gaining energy = ______ in heat.
Internal Energy • Internal Energy = the energy within the _______ of the _______ in the object. • Examples: • Chemical PE that could be released during _______. • KE of individual _________ moving.
Heat and Energy Transfer • When objects interact, there are _______ types of heat transfer that can occur. • _____________ • _____________ • _____________
Conduction • Conduction – transfer of energy/heat by ________ or ________. • This energy passes through matter because of ________ to ________ vibration. • Most affective through __________.
Radiation • Transfer of energy from ________ passing through ______ or ________. • All ________ has energy. • We cannot see all forms of light. We can’t see gamma, x-ray, UV, infrared, microwave, or radiowaves.
Convection • Transfer of energy that happens in ________ ________. • Occurs in _______ and ________. • Warm air is ________ dense than cold air, and this makes the warm air _______. As it gives off energy, it becomes ______ dense and sinks. • Think about _________!
Insulators • Materials that _______ or _______ transfer of energy. • Examples! • ___________________________________ • ___________________________________ • ___________________________________ • ___________________________________ • ___________________________________
Conductors • Materials that _______ transfer energy easily. • Examples! • _________________________________________ • _________________________________________
Thermodynamic Equilibrium • If two or more objects are _________ and are the ________ temperature, the energy transfer between them is ________.
Laws of Thermodynamics • There are ____ laws of thermodynamics. • The laws explain ______ energy will move. They do not explain ______ the energy moves.
0th Law of Thermodynamics • If ______ or more objects are in contact with each other and are the same temperature, they are at ____________ ______________.
1st Law of Thermodynamics • When heat energy is ________ to matter, the total heat added to the matter ________ the internal energy of the matter minus the ______ it preformed.
2nd Law of Thermodynamics • Energy moves _______ the energy gradient. So energy will move toward where there is _____ energy: i.e., ______ energy will move toward _______.
3rd Law of Thermodynamics • _________ ________ is a real number. If anything is found at it, it will be a ________ ________ and will have NO energy transfer.
Entropy • A measure of ________ or ________ in molecules. • The more _________ something has, the _______ entropy it has.