Physics, asked by rbhupendrasingh8329, 1 year ago

The internal energy of an ideal gas increases during an isothermal process when the gas is

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Answered by Anonymous
6

Their internal energy changes with change in pressure, even if temperature is constant. For an ideal gas, in an isothermal process, ΔU=0=Q−W, so Q=W. The internal energy is a state function dependent on temperature. Hence, the internal energy change is zero.

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