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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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the way that it does. The Laws of Thermodynamics give us the whats and whys of heat flow.<br />

The laws of thermodynamics are a bit strange. There are four of them, but they are ordered zero <strong>to</strong><br />

three, and not one <strong>to</strong> four. They weren’t discovered in the order in which they’re numbered, and<br />

some—particularly the Second Law—have many different formulations, which seem <strong>to</strong> have<br />

nothing <strong>to</strong> do with one another.<br />

There will almost certainly be a question on the Second Law on <strong>SAT</strong> <strong>II</strong> <strong>Physics</strong>, and quite<br />

possibly something on the First Law. The Zeroth Law and Third Law are unlikely <strong>to</strong> come up,<br />

but we include them here for the sake of completion. Questions on the Laws of Thermodynamics<br />

will probably be qualitative: as long as you understand what these laws mean, you probably won’t<br />

have <strong>to</strong> do any calculating.<br />

Zeroth Law<br />

If system A is at thermal equilibrium with system B, and B is at thermal equilibrium with system<br />

C, then A is at thermal equilibrium with C. This is more a matter of logic than of physics. Two<br />

systems are at thermal equilibrium if they have the same temperature. If A and B have the same<br />

temperature, and B and C have the same temperature, then A and C have the same temperature.<br />

The significant consequence of the Zeroth Law is that, when a hotter object and a colder object are<br />

placed in contact with one another, heat will flow from the hotter object <strong>to</strong> the colder object until<br />

they are in thermal equilibrium.<br />

First Law<br />

Consider an isolated system—that is, one where heat and energy neither enter nor leave the<br />

system. Such a system is doing no work, but we associate with it a certain internal energy, U,<br />

which is related <strong>to</strong> the kinetic energy of the molecules in the system, and therefore <strong>to</strong> the system’s<br />

temperature. Internal energy is similar <strong>to</strong> potential energy in that it is a property of a system that is<br />

doing no work, but has the potential <strong>to</strong> do work.<br />

The First Law tells us that the internal energy of a system increases if heat is added <strong>to</strong> the system<br />

or if work is done on the system and decreases if the system gives off heat or does work. We can<br />

express this law as an equation:<br />

where U signifies internal energy, Q signifies heat, and W signifies work.<br />

The First Law is just another way of stating the law of conservation of energy. Both heat and work<br />

are forms of energy, so any heat or work that goes in<strong>to</strong> or out of a system must affect the internal<br />

energy of that system.<br />

EXAMPLE<br />

193

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