TEXTS FOR ADDITIONAL READING AND UNDERSTANDING
TEXT 1
HEAT AND TEMPERATURE
Vocabulary
energy-in-residence |
имеющая (наличествующая) энергия |
energy-in-transit |
перемещаемая энергия |
понимать |
Thermal energy, or the energy of heat, is really a form of kinetic energy between particles at the atomic or molecular level: the greater the movement of these particles, the greater the thermal energy. Heat itself is internal thermal energy that flows from one body of matter to another. It is not the same as the energy contained in a system—that is, the internal thermal energy of the system. Rather than being "energy-in-residence," heat is "energy-in-transit."
This may be a little hard to comprehend, but it can be explained in terms of the stone-and-cliff kinetic energy illustration used above. Just as a system can have no kinetic energy unless something is moving within it, heat exists only when energy is being transferred. In the above illustration of mechanical energy, when the stone was sitting on the ground at the top of the cliff, it was analogous to a particle of internal energy in body A. When, at the end, it was again on the ground—only this time at the bottom of the canyon—it was the same as a particle of internal energy that has transferred to body B. In between, however, as it was falling from one to the other, it was equivalent to a unit of heat.
TEXT 2
TEMPERATURE
Vocabulary
twice |
дважды |
expansion |
расширение |
In everyday life, people think they know what temperature is: a measure of heat and cold. This is wrong for two reasons: first, as discussed below, there is no such thing as "cold"—only an absence of heat. So, then, is temperature a measure of heat? Wrong again.
Imagine two objects, one of mass M and the other with a mass twice as great, or
What temperature does indicate is the direction of internal energy flow between bodies, and the average molecular kinetic energy in transit between those bodies. More simply, though a bit less precisely, it can be defined as a measure of heat differences. (As for the means by which a thermometer indicates temperature, that is beyond the parameters of the subject at hand; it is discussed elsewhere in this volume, in the context of thermal expansion.)
TEXT 3
MEASURING TEMPERATURE AND HEAT
Vocabulary
Fahrenheit scale |
шкала Фаренгейта |
Centigrade scale |
шкала Цельсия |
relevance |
соответствие |
draw on |
влечь |
contract |
сокращать (ся) |
SI - the international system of units of measurement |
Международная система единиц |
джоуль |
|
newton |
ньютон (единица измерения силы) |
foot-pound |
футофунт (работа, равная работе по поднятию одного фунта на один фут) |
British thermal unit |
британская тепловая единица, БТЕ (количество теплоты, необходимое для повышения температуры одного фунта воды на 1° F) |
heat capacity |
теплоёмкость |
kilocalorie |
килокалория |
dietary |
диетический |
specific heat capacity |
удельная теплоёмкоть |
Temperature, of course, can be measured either by the Fahrenheit or Centigrade scales familiar in everyday life. Another temperature scale of relevance to the present discussion is the Kelvin scale, established by William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824-1907).
Drawing on the discovery made by French physicist and chemist J. A. C. Charles (1746-1823), that gas at
Measuring Heat and Heat Capacity
Heat, on the other hand, is measured not by degrees (discussed along with the thermometer in the context of thermal expansion), but by the same units as work. Since energy is the ability to perform work, heat or work units are also units of energy. The principal unit of energy in the SI or metric system is the joule (J), equal to 1 newton-meter (N · m), and the primary unit in the British or English system is the foot-pound (ft · lb). One foot-pound is equal to 1.356 J, and 1 joule is equal to
Two other units are frequently used for heat as well. In the British system, there is the Btu, or British thermal unit, equal to
A kilocalorie is identical to the heat capacity for one kilogram of water. Heat capacity (sometimes called specific heat capacity or specific heat) is the amount of heat that must be added to, or removed from, a unit of mass for a given substance to change its temperature by