Human body Physics 2020 question

AI Thread Summary
To determine how much water the internal membranes must supply to saturate exhaled air at 98.6°F, start by calculating the water content in 10 liters of air at 50% humidity and 68°F, then find the additional water needed for saturation. The saturation vapor pressures at the two temperatures will guide this calculation. For the daily heat loss, convert the total liters of air breathed per day into grams of water using the density of water, then multiply by the heat loss per gram of vaporized water (580 calories). This process involves a series of conversions to arrive at the final answer for both water supply and heat loss. Understanding these calculations is essential for solving the problem effectively.
sprint84
Messages
2
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



If a person breathes 10 liters per minute or air at 68 deg(F) and 50% relative humidity, how much water per day must the internal membranes supply to saturate the air at 98.6 Deg(F) (Assume all moisture is exhaled) If each gram of water extracts 580 calories as it is vaporized, how much daily heat loss in kilo-calories (Food calories) does the represent? (Saturation vapor pressure at 20 degrees(C) is 17g/m^3 and at 37 deg(C) 44g/m^3.

Water Per Day:
Energy per day lost:

Homework Equations


)delta)T=Q/cm
Q=cm(deltaT)

The Attempt at a Solution


I am clueless where to start
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Thats a good one.
For the first part: you need to find how much water is in a liter of air at 50% humidity at 68F, figure out what that corresponds to at 98F, and see how much more water is needed to get to 100% humidity (saturated).
% humidity is the percentage of saturated vapor pressure for a given temperature.
Once you have that, the second part is easy.

Does that make sense?
 
zhermes said:
Thats a good one.
For the first part: you need to find how much water is in a liter of air at 50% humidity at 68F, figure out what that corresponds to at 98F, and see how much more water is needed to get to 100% humidity (saturated).
% humidity is the percentage of saturated vapor pressure for a given temperature.
Once you have that, the second part is easy.

Does that make sense?

Yes it does what formula am I going to use now that I have figured them out?
 
I assume you mean for the second part ('how much daily heat loss...').

Well, its essentially just a really big conversion problem:
It says we breath 10L per minute, so we need to figure out how many liters that is per day. Then we have to convert liters/day to grams/day (so you need to the density of water). Finally, it says one loses 580 cals/gram of water, so we need to convert grams/day to cal/day---> and that's the answer!
 
I multiplied the values first without the error limit. Got 19.38. rounded it off to 2 significant figures since the given data has 2 significant figures. So = 19. For error I used the above formula. It comes out about 1.48. Now my question is. Should I write the answer as 19±1.5 (rounding 1.48 to 2 significant figures) OR should I write it as 19±1. So in short, should the error have same number of significant figures as the mean value or should it have the same number of decimal places as...
Thread 'A cylinder connected to a hanging mass'
Let's declare that for the cylinder, mass = M = 10 kg Radius = R = 4 m For the wall and the floor, Friction coeff = ##\mu## = 0.5 For the hanging mass, mass = m = 11 kg First, we divide the force according to their respective plane (x and y thing, correct me if I'm wrong) and according to which, cylinder or the hanging mass, they're working on. Force on the hanging mass $$mg - T = ma$$ Force(Cylinder) on y $$N_f + f_w - Mg = 0$$ Force(Cylinder) on x $$T + f_f - N_w = Ma$$ There's also...
Back
Top