kittu1421 said:
Thnk u all but the thing is yes it is true that 'a' coefficient of thermal expansion depends on temperature and thermal expansion is linear for small temperature changes, the problem i am facing is even if i am considering these two i am getting a diff result.
For ex. If we cosider
t3-t2 = t2-t1 = unity
Then for expnasion from l2 to l1
The base (reference) length is l1
But for expansion from l3 to l2
The base (reference) length is l2
So, for same change in temp. Change in length is diff.
One more thing is if we consider a thermometer working betweenqq
Yes, for same temperature change the change is different. There is no contradiction in this, in principle. I already gave you the example with two bars of different lengths and same temperature difference.
Anyway the linear formula for thermal expansion is just an approximation.
It works well if ε=α ΔT <<1.
For your example,
l3-l2=l2αΔT=l2ε=l1(1+ε)ε=l1ε +l1ε
2
But l1ε=l2-l1.
So the difference between the two changes is of the order ε
2.
However when we decided to use the linear formula for thermal expansion we assumed that terms of higher order are negligible. Then in this model, the two differences are "the same".
If the difference is not negligible, then the linear formula does not work so you have to use a better model.
In practice the linear model is quite good and the two differences are the "same" with good approximation for temperature ranges of the order of 100 C, as found on most common thermometers.
The values of α for solids are of the order 10
-6. For a change in temperature of the order of 100 C, the ε in the above equation will be 10
-4.
By neglecting the second order terms the error will be of the order of 10
-4 or 0.01%.
So the the two differences, even though they are technically different they are practically the same. For mercury the coefficient is a little higher, of the order of 10
-5 but still low enough to have a scale approximately linear for a thermometer with a range of 100 C.