Physics, asked by Anonymous, 1 day ago

give some examples for thermal equilibrium? no copy if you copy ur answer will be deleted !!​

Answers

Answered by BrainlyBears
2

Answer:

Here are some examples of situations where thermal equilibrium occurs:

Explanation:

  • Measuring body temperature through a thermometer works that way. The long duration that the thermometer must have in contact with the body to be able to truly quantify the degrees of temperature is due precisely to the time it takes to reach thermal equilibrium.

  • Products that are sold ‘natural’ may have passed through a refrigerator. However, after some time outside the refrigerator, in contact with the natural environment, they reached thermal equilibrium with it.

  • The permanence of glaciers in the seas and at the poles is a particular case of thermal equilibrium. Precisely, warnings about global warming have a lot to do with an increase in the temperature of the seas, and then a thermal equilibrium where much of that ice melts.

  • When a person comes out of bathing, it is relatively cold because the body had entered into equilibrium with the hot water, and now it must balance with the environment.

  • When looking to cool a cup of coffee, adding cold milk.

  • Substances like butter are very sensitive to changes in temperature, and in very little time in contact with the environment at natural temperature they come into balance and melt.

  • When you put your hand on a cold railing, for a time, your hand becomes colder.

  • A bottle with a kilo of ice cream will melt slower than another with a quarter of a kilo of the same ice cream. This is produced by the equation in which the mass determines the characteristics of the thermal equilibrium.

  • When an ice cube is placed in a glass of water, a thermal equilibrium also occurs. The only difference is that equilibrium implies a change of state, because it goes through 100 ° C where water goes from solid to liquid.

  • Add cold water at a rate of hot water, where equilibrium is reached very quickly at a colder temperature than the original.
Answered by shaun5
1

Explanation:

As for examples of thermal equilibrium, you probably don’t need to look very far. For example, a cup of water sitting on your desk, defined by the center 50% of its volume is very likely in thermal equilibrium. Water is a good enough conductor of heat that discarding boundary effects where the water touches the air or the container that it’s in, it is a homogeneous temperature

which is a requirement of equilibrium.

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