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10 August, 03:35

You find it takes 200 J of heat to take 4 kg of an unknown substance from 200 K to 240 K. It does not change phases during this interval. If you added 300 J of heat to the substance instead of 200 J, what would be its final temperature?

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  1. 10 August, 06:00
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    300 K

    Explanation:

    First, we have find the specific heat capacity of the unknown substance.

    The heat gained by the substance is given by the formula:

    H = m*c * (T2 - T1)

    Where m = mass of the substance

    c = specific heat capacity

    T2 = final temperature

    T1 = initial temperature

    From the question:

    H = 200J

    m = 4 kg

    T1 = 200K

    T2 = 240 K

    Therefore:

    200 = 4 * c * (240 - 200)

    200 = 4 * c * 40

    200 = 160 * c

    c = 200/160

    c = 1.25 J/kgK

    The heat capacity of the substance is 1.25 J/kgK.

    If 300 J of heat is added, the new heat becomes 500 J.

    Hence, we need to find the final temperature, T2, when heat is 500 J.

    Using the same formula:

    500 = 4 * 1.25 * (T2 - 200)

    500 = 5 * (T2 - 200)

    100 = T2 - 200

    => T2 = 100 + 200 = 300 K

    The new final temperature of the unknown substance is 300K.
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