What is the Derivative of P/T with respect to T?

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Homework Statement



Hi, i have a little problem with a demostration, I hope you can help me.

Homework Equations


this said that we have a system, a gas is containing in a recipe, there's no heat exchange neither work with the enviroment, only an expansion v to 2v, we have to find that

(dT/dv)u=-(T^2/Cv)(d/dT)(P/T)v

The Attempt at a Solution



I start with
dU=(dU/dT)vdT+(dU/dv)t dU=0
(dT/dv)u=-(dU/dv)(dT/dU)vdv

(dT/du)v=1/Cv

(dT/du)=-(1/cv)(T(dP/dT)-P)

I don't know how continue!
 
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Welcome to PF;

Have I understood you correctly:
An ideal(?) gas in a container (recipe?!), no heat may enter or leave the container(?), and no work is done on or by the gas(?) ... yet there is an expansion? How can this be?

It sounds like you are trying to describe an adiabatic expansion.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Welcome to PF;

Have I understood you correctly:
An ideal(?) gas in a container (recipe?!), no heat may enter or leave the container(?), and no work is done on or by the gas(?) ... yet there is an expansion? How can this be?

It sounds like you are trying to describe an adiabatic expansion.


yes! Sorry i have some problems lol! In fact it's a free expansion U=0 Q=0 and w=0
 
A free expansion

I try to find the Joule coefficient (dT/dv) constant U.
I must find that it's equal to -(T^2/Cv)d/dT(P/T) constant V, but
I found that it's equal to (-1/Cv)(T(dP/dT)v-P)
 
Oh you mean - like in the title ?!

All right: you got
$$\left.\frac{dT}{dv}\right|_U = -\frac{1}{C_v}\left(T\left.\frac{dP}{dT}\right|_v -P \right)$$

You need to get from there to:$$\left.\frac{dT}{dv}\right|_U = -\frac{T^2}{C_v}\left. \frac{d}{dT}\frac{P}{T}\right|_v$$

... it looks like you are almost there since you expression rearranges as:

$$\left.\frac{dT}{dv}\right|_U = -\frac{T^2}{C_v}\left(\frac{1}{T}\left.\frac{dP}{dT}\right|_v -\frac{P}{T^2} \right)$$

So what is $$\frac{d}{dT}\frac{P}{T}$$
 
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To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.
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