Why does the coefficient for steel in expansion change with temperature?

AI Thread Summary
The coefficient of linear expansion for steel is expressed in K-1 because it measures the material's expansion per unit length for each degree of temperature increase. When calculating temperature changes, the numerical values for Celsius and Kelvin are equivalent, meaning a temperature difference of 1°C is the same as 1 K. It is essential to use Kelvin for absolute temperatures, but for temperature differences, either scale can be used. The discussion clarifies that steel expands by 1.2 parts in 100,000 for each 1 K increase in temperature. Understanding these concepts is crucial for accurately applying the formula for linear expansion.
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Homework Statement


upload_2015-5-14_22-0-5.png


Homework Equations


ΔL = α L0 ΔT

The Attempt at a Solution


I converted the 0.62 mm to meters, giving 0.00062 m

am I suppose to convert the degrees from Celsius to K? why is the coefficient for steel in K-1? What does that even mean?

anyway, I converted C to K and answer I got was my initial length to be 0.180 meters
 
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goonking said:
I converted the 0.62 mm to meters, giving 0.00064 m
0.00062 m

goonking said:
am I suppose to convert the degrees from Celsius to K? why is the coefficient for steel in K-1? What does that even mean?

You are dealing with temperature differences, not absolute temperatures. The temperature difference has the same numerical value in the Kelvin and Celsius scales, i.e., for temperature differences 1 K = 1 °C. When absolute temperatures are involved, it is essentially always necessary to use Kelvin unless an expression has been specifically tailored to the Celsius scale. In physics, Kelvin is a more natural scale than Celsius as it has zero at absolute zero.

And again, do not confuse C with °C (or ° C, which has no meaning, for that matter ...).
 
The coefficient for expansion means that steel expands 1.2 parts in 100,000 for each 1 Kelvin increase in temperature. A change of one Kelvin and one degree Celsius is the same, so you actually don't have to convert in this instance. Kelvin is a standard temperature scale used by the scientific community. Many tables of the coefficients of expansion for different materials are given in Kelvin, so that is probably why it was used.
 
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