Heat transfer and elastic collision

In summary, the picture seems to show that the faster atom can get even faster than the slower atom after collision.
  • #1
luis20
50
0
I found the following:

We have already seen that the flow of heat through conduction occurs when fast (hot) atoms collide with slow (cool) atoms, transferring some of their kinetic energy in the process. One might wonder why the fast atoms don't collide with the cool ones and subsequently speed up, thereby gaining kinetic energy as the cool ones lose kinetic energy - this would involve the spontaneous transfer of heat from a cool object to a hot one, in violation of the 2nd law. The answer lies in energy and momentum conservation in a collision - one can show, using these two principles, that in a collision between two objects which conserves energy (called an elastic collision) the faster object slows down and the slower object speeds up.

I believe there are some configurations in which the hot atoms speed up and the colder atoms slow down.
The energy flows from hot to cold, but it's possible that some energy also flow from cold to hot, naturally. But in the end, the flow is like 99% from hot to cold.

Am I right or is the statement in bold true, and if so, how can you prove it?
 
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  • #2
I believe there are some configurations in which the hot atoms speed up and the colder atoms slow down.
If you have an elastic collision between a fast object and a slow object of the same mass, the fast object will always lose energy and the slow object will gain energy. With different masses, I would assume that you can make the same statement with kinetic energy, but I did not check this.
Note that individual atoms do not have a temperature - there are no "not atoms", just atoms with a high kinetic energy.

The energy flows from hot to cold, but it's possible that some energy also flow from cold to hot, naturally.
Yes. This is related to the velocity distribution of the atoms - some atoms in a cold object are quite fast, too, and some atoms in a hot object are slow. If those hit each other, you transfer some energy from the cold object to the hot one. However, this is rare, the common process is energy transfer hot -> cold.

In this post, I neglected other energy types which can be present, but the concept is similar for them.
 
  • #3
mfb said:
If you have an elastic collision between a fast object and a slow object of the same mass, the fast object will always lose energy and the slow object will gain energy.

Thanks a lot for the answer.

But look at this example (in the attachment):

Atom A is slower and atom B is faster. The configuration in the left side is when the atoms start to really feel the repelling forces from each other. If this is the real configuration, then atom B will gain |Vx| and |Vy| so it will get even faster than atom A.

So, according to this example, hot atoms can speed up and colder atoms slow down. What do you think now?

I really need someone to support this idea, or explain me why I'm possibly wrong ! :)
 

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  • #4
Anyone? :eek:

Look at the picture. It seems there are collisions in which the faster object gets even faster than the slower object.
 
  • #5
Let's see, all units are m/s:
The center of mass system moves with 5 to the right, 0.5 down. In this, both objects have a velocity of sqrt(5^2+0.5^2). This velocity is the same after the impact, but the direction can be different. In the ideal case, the fast object moves in the same direction as the center of mass system in our lab system. Transformed back, it gets a velocity of 2sqrt(5^2+0.5^2)=~10.05. Which means you are right. Even more: One object can stop completely (maybe a feature of the orthongonal velocity vectors). Unless I made a mistake here.

However, this is quite unlikely - on average, there is an transfer energy to the slower particle.
 
  • #6
  • #7
mfb said:
Let's see, all units are m/s:
The center of mass system moves with 5 to the right, 0.5 down. In this, both objects have a velocity of sqrt(5^2+0.5^2). This velocity is the same after the impact, but the direction can be different. In the ideal case, the fast object moves in the same direction as the center of mass system in our lab system. Transformed back, it gets a velocity of 2sqrt(5^2+0.5^2)=~10.05. Which means you are right. Even more: One object can stop completely (maybe a feature of the orthongonal velocity vectors). Unless I made a mistake here.

However, this is quite unlikely - on average, there is an transfer energy to the slower particle.

I didn't quite understand how did you make the calculations but I could see that the faster atom most speed up! If the slower atom comes perpendicularly or from behind, the faster object will speed up.
I think this could be likely in a system with few atoms. In the real situation, atoms are surrounded in many directions, and so the entropy goes up. Energy flows from hot to cold.

Another point: You said atom B gained 0.05 m/s, but we could come up with another situation in which the faster atom (B) would gain even more velocity, right?
 
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  • #8
256bits said:
elastic collisions have conservation of kinetic energy as well as conservation of momentum.

You can play around with the equations on this site here, with different velocities and masses of particles.
http://chemistrydaily.com/chemistry/Elastic_collision

Thanks. The problem is: I'm talking about collisions in at least 2 dimensions. Calculations become harder. :\
 
  • #9
I'm looking at your picture, and wondering how two "billiard balls" can collide in such a way. Specifically, you're requiring that the slow moving ball strikes the rear of the fast moving ball. If they are to collide with those precise velocities, would they not collide in such a way that the contact point is on the forward-moving face of the faster ball?

At the point when they are perfectly aligned vertically, if they have not yet collided, then I suggest that they never will, because the receding ball is traveling faster than the approaching ball, so the separation between the centres will increase, and since they are both circular, this means the minimum separation between the edges will also increase.
 
  • #10
luis20 said:
Another point: You said atom B gained 0.05 m/s, but we could come up with another situation in which the faster atom (B) would gain even more velocity, right?
The whole kinetic energy is transferred, there is no way to make it faster.

I'm looking at your picture, and wondering how two "billiard balls" can collide in such a way.
The contact point is the uppermost point of the lower ball. The horizontal velocity remains unchanged, and the vertical velocity is as in a 1-dimensional collision.
At the point when they are perfectly aligned vertically, if they have not yet collided, then I suggest that they never will, because the receding ball is traveling faster than the approaching ball, so the separation between the centres will increase
That is not right, as the movement of the slower ball is directly in the direction of the ball separation, while the other ball moves perpendicular to that. Those collisions are possible, too, but the energy of the faster ball is a bit lower there.
 
  • #11
Right! One last question

The equation of conservation of energy is:

Ma*sqrt(Viax^2 + Viay^2) + Mb*sqrt(Vibx^2 + Viby^2) = Ma*sqrt(Vfax^2 + Vfay^2) + Mb*sqrt(Vfbx^2 + Vfby^2)

and not separated like this:Ma*Viax^2 + Mb*Vibx^2 = Ma*Vfax^2 + Mb*Vfbx^2 , for direction x

Ma*Viay^2 + Mb*Viby^2 = Ma*Vfay^2 + Mb*Vfby^2 , for direction y
Right? It's a stupid question, I'm just not sure x_xNote: Via= initial velocity of body A; Vfb= final velocity of body B...
 

1. What is heat transfer?

Heat transfer is the process of thermal energy moving from one location to another due to a temperature difference. This can occur through three main mechanisms: conduction, convection, and radiation.

2. What is an elastic collision?

An elastic collision is a type of collision where the total kinetic energy of the system is conserved. This means that the objects involved bounce off each other without any loss of energy. This can occur when the objects involved are perfectly elastic and there is no external force acting on the system.

3. What is the difference between conduction and convection?

Conduction is the transfer of heat through a solid or stationary material, while convection is the transfer of heat through a fluid or moving material. In conduction, the heat is transferred by the movement of molecules, while in convection, the heat is transferred by the movement of the fluid itself.

4. How does heat transfer affect temperature?

Heat transfer can cause a change in temperature by either adding or removing thermal energy from a system. When heat is transferred into a system, the temperature will increase, and when heat is transferred out of a system, the temperature will decrease.

5. What factors affect the rate of heat transfer?

The rate of heat transfer is affected by several factors, including the temperature difference between the two objects, the thermal conductivity of the material, the surface area and distance between the objects, and the presence of any insulating materials. Additionally, the type of heat transfer (conduction, convection, or radiation) will also affect the rate of heat transfer.

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