What will be the change in temperature of the water?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the change in temperature of water when a hot iron bar is placed in it, the heat lost by the iron must equal the heat gained by the water, according to the first law of thermodynamics. The formula used is based on the mass, specific heat, and change in temperature of both substances. The final temperature (T) can be calculated by setting the heat lost by the iron equal to the heat gained by the water. While the answer is known to be a 5°C change, understanding the calculations and conversions involved is crucial for clarity. Further explanation is needed for those struggling with the concepts of heat transfer and temperature change in this context.
Khemkhajon
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Homework Statement


A 500.0-g iron bar at 212 C is placed in 2.0 L of water at 24.0 C. What will be the change in temperature of the water ( Assume no heat is lost to the surroundings.)

Homework Equations


(Mass of substance)(Specific Heat of substance)( Change in Temp)

The Attempt at a Solution



I am having a lot of trouble with this problem. I don't fully understand how I use that forumula to find the change? I know the answer is 5 C. But I don't understand how. I was wondering if someone could explain how you come about to get this answer using the formulas cause this would be very helpful? Do I have to convert anything or what? So confused.
 
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From the first law of thermodynamics (conservation of energy), we know that the amount of heat lost by the iron bar will be equal to the amount of heat gained by the water. Assuming the final temperature of the system is the variable T, you can express the change in temperature of the iron bar in terms of T and calculate the amount of heat lost (in terms of T). You can set up a similar expression to calculate the amount of heat gained by the water in terms of T. Then, because you know that the amount of heat lost by the iron equals the amount of heat gained by the water, you can set the two expressions equal and solve for T.
 
Ygggdrasil said:
From the first law of thermodynamics (conservation of energy), we know that the amount of heat lost by the iron bar will be equal to the amount of heat gained by the water. Assuming the final temperature of the system is the variable T, you can express the change in temperature of the iron bar in terms of T and calculate the amount of heat lost (in terms of T). You can set up a similar expression to calculate the amount of heat gained by the water in terms of T. Then, because you know that the amount of heat lost by the iron equals the amount of heat gained by the water, you can set the two expressions equal and solve for T.

regarding this problem my dear brother, if we use the way you explained, then we are assuming
that the change in Temp for water equals the chane in Temp of Iron, the thing that can't
be proven, because the only thing that can be proven is that the heat(q) lost by the iron is equal to the heat gained by the water..would you please clarify it more for me, because I've
the same problem but it's a little bit more complicated because neither of lost and gain heat is given and am still stuck for the last few days...really grateful for ur help
 
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I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
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