Heat and Ideal Gas Homework: Point 3 Pressure Calculation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating pressure and volume at different points in an ideal gas scenario. The user calculated the volume at point 3 as 4.52 x 10^(-2) and assumed the volume at point 2 is the same as point 1, leading to confusion about pressure consistency. They applied the ideal gas law and the adiabatic formula to derive their results. Other participants confirmed the method and results align with the provided graph. The overall consensus is that the calculations appear correct based on the given information.
element72
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Homework Statement


Look at picture



The Attempt at a Solution


For V at point 3 I got 4.52 x 10^(-2)
For V at point 2 I assumed it was the same as Point 1, but this is where it gets confusing because if I assume that, then does point 3 have the same pressure as point 1?

This was actually on my test I just took! and that's all the given info she gave me. Please let me know what you get.
 

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Show me your work?
 
dacruick said:
Show me your work?

I used the formula PV = nRT for Point 1 and solved for V1 = 2.46x10^(-2)
I made the assumption that V2 = V1

Then I used the adiabatic formula, TV^(gamma - 1) = constant for Point 2 to Point 3.
I just plugged in everything and got V3 = 4.52 x 10^(-2)

Do you really want me to type out all the steps I did? because I am doing this at least 3 times over and I'm getting the same thing.
 
Well you typing out all of the steps allows me to help you without doing the steps myself. I'm lazy enough to not want to do the question, but I am still willing to help lol.

Your method looks right, and the answer coincides with your graph. So I say its good.
 
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