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Homework Statement
Show that the heat energy per unit mass necessary to raise the temperature of a thin slice of thickness \Deltax from 0^o{} to u(x,t) is not c(x)u(x,t). but instead \int_0^uc(x,\overline{u})d\overline{u}.
Homework Equations
According to the text, the relationship between thermal energy and temperature is given by
e(x,t) = c(x)p(x)u(x,t),
which states that the thermal energy per unit volume equals the thermal energy per unit mass per unit degree times the temperature time the mass density.
When the specific heat c(x) is independent of temperature, the heat energy per unit mass is just c(x)u(x,t).
The Attempt at a Solution
The only hint really is that this is related to the area, from the solution. How can I go about this geometrically and/or algebraically?
Any help/pointers will be much appreciated. Thank you!