Heat and internal energy of water temperature

AI Thread Summary
Water at the top of Niagara Falls, initially at 10.0 degrees Celsius, falls 50.0 meters, converting potential energy into heat. The relevant equation is mgh = mc(Tf - Ti), where m is mass, g is gravitational acceleration, h is height, c is specific heat capacity, Tf is final temperature, and Ti is initial temperature. The mass cancels out, simplifying the equation to gh/c + Ti = Tf. This calculation allows for determining the final temperature of the water at the bottom of the falls. The discussion emphasizes the relationship between potential energy and temperature change in this context.
mizzy
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Homework Statement


Water at the top of Niagara Falls has a temperature of 10.0degrees celsius. If it falls a distance of 50.0m and all of its potential energy goes into heating the water, calculate the temperature of the water at the bottom of the falls.


Homework Equations



W = change in kinetic energy + change in potential energy

The Attempt at a Solution


i know there's potential energy on top and none at the bottom. There's not kinetic energy at the top and there is at the bottom. But how do i put temperature into this equation?
 
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The change in potential energy of the water = heat absorbed by water


You should know the equation Q=mcΔT
 
so distance isn't included in the equation? and mass?
 
mizzy said:
so distance isn't included in the equation? and mass?

The height is a distance and the mass will not really matter.
 
so, mgh = mc(T-Ti)

then solve for Tf?

therefore,

mgh = mc(Tf - Ti)
gh = cTf - cTi
gh + cTi = cTf
gh/c + Ti = Tf
 
Yes that should work.
 
Thanks
 
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