Relationship between Molar Mass and Velocity of Hydrogen and Oxygen

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relationship between molar mass and the velocity of hydrogen and oxygen at room temperature. It clarifies that while hydrogen moves at 3000 m/s, oxygen, which has a molar mass 16 times greater, will not travel at (1/16) of that speed. Instead, the correct relationship derived from kinetic energy principles shows that the velocity of oxygen is actually 1/4 that of hydrogen. Thus, if hydrogen moves at 3000 m/s, oxygen would move at 750 m/s. The key takeaway is the inverse relationship between mass and velocity in terms of kinetic energy.
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Homework Statement



Lets say at room temp an atom of hydrogen moves at 3000 m/s. Let's say all things the same except you replace the hydrogen with oxygen. The oxygen is about 16 times the molar mass than hydrogen. Does this mean that the oxygen will travel at (1/16)*3000 m/s?




The Attempt at a Solution



This is not really a homework question but we are dealing with stuff like this in class and it has been confusing me. 1/16 times the original velocity is my guess.
 
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That's a wrong guess. It's the kinetic energy of the molecules that remains the same.
 
Dick said:
That's a wrong guess. It's the kinetic energy of the molecules that remains the same.

well then if that's the case then the velocity would stay the same... right?
 
Nooooo! KE=(1/2)*m*v^2. So mH*vH^2=mO*vO^2. If mO=16*mH, how are vH and vO related?
 
Dick said:
Nooooo! KE=(1/2)*m*v^2. So mH*vH^2=mO*vO^2. If mO=16*mH, how are vH and vO related?

this would make

sqrt(1/16*vH^2) = sqrt(vO^2)

so vO would = 1/4 vH

so if H was moving at 3000 m/s then O would be moving at 750 m/s.
 
That's much better.
 
Dick said:
That's much better.

heheheh thankyou very much
 
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