Ideally, when a thermometer is used to measure the temperature of an object, the
ID: 1504081 • Letter: I
Question
Ideally, when a thermometer is used to measure the temperature of an object, the temperature of the object itself should not change. However, if a significant amount of heat flows from the object to the thermometer, the temperature will change. A thermometer has a mass of 33.0 g, a specific heat capacity of c = 815 J/(kg·C°), and a temperature of 12.0°C. It is immersed in 119 g of water, and the final temperature of the water and thermometer is 41.7°C. What was the temperature of the water before the insertion of the thermometer? (See Table 12.2 for appropriate constants.) please show steps.
Explanation / Answer
m1 =33 g , T1 = 12 oC, C =815 J/kg oC
m2 =119 g , Tf = 41.7 oC, C = 4186 J/kg oC
Al equllibrium final temperature of water , thermometer will be same
Heat gain by thermometer = Heat lost by water
m1C*(Tf -T1) = -m2C*(Tf -T2)
(0.033)*815*(41.7 -12) = -(0.119*4186*(41.7 - T2)
initial temperature of water T2 = 42.65 oC
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