User:Mark Widmer/sandbox: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Mark Widmer
No edit summary
imported>Mark Widmer
Line 5: Line 5:
Thermal conductivity, intro
Thermal conductivity, intro


The SI unit of thermal conductivity is watts per meter-kelvin, or W/(m•K). Note that, as it is ''differences'' in temperature that are relevant, kelvins are interchangeable with degrees Celsius. Alternative units are W/(cm•K) and BTU/(hr•ft•C)
Thermal conductivity is a measure of the ability of a material to conduct or transfer heat.
 
The SI unit of thermal conductivity is watts per meter-kelvin, or W/(m•K). This is equivalent to W/(m•°C) since it is ''differences'' in temperature that are relevant in calculations that involve thermal conductivity, and kelvins are then interchangeable with degrees Celsius. Alternative units are W/(cm•K) and BTU/(hr•ft•°C)
 
Quick scale: The thermal conductivity of copper is about 20 times that of a poor metal conductor like stainless steel.
 
Values are near room temperature.


==Heat equation==
==Heat equation==

Revision as of 16:38, 9 November 2021

Sandbox. Mark Widmer (talk) 01:17, 5 August 2021 (UTC)

Benchmark quantities

Thermal conductivity, intro

Thermal conductivity is a measure of the ability of a material to conduct or transfer heat.

The SI unit of thermal conductivity is watts per meter-kelvin, or W/(m•K). This is equivalent to W/(m•°C) since it is differences in temperature that are relevant in calculations that involve thermal conductivity, and kelvins are then interchangeable with degrees Celsius. Alternative units are W/(cm•K) and BTU/(hr•ft•°C)

Quick scale: The thermal conductivity of copper is about 20 times that of a poor metal conductor like stainless steel.

Values are near room temperature.

Heat equation

Heat_equation

Define variables when equation is used for temperature: u=temperature, k = k_therm / (c*rho)

Define variable when equation refers to diffusion: u = density???

Draft for additions to Hill_sphere New sections:

Hill sphere and L1 Lagrange point

-- added note in Formulas section

Hill sphere of the Sun

-- added to article

Hill sphere of objects that orbit Earth

The Moon -- added to article

Artificial satellites in low-Earth orbit -- added to article

L1 Lagrange point for comparable-mass objects

Usually, derivations of the L1 point assume a planetary mass that is much less than the star's mass. This no longer applies if the orbiting objects have comparable masses. This is the case for many binary star systems. For example, in the Alpha Centauri system, the stars Alpha Centauri A and B have masses that are 1.1 and 0.9 times that of the Sun, respectively, or a mass ratio of about 0.8.

For two equal-mass objects, let R be the distance between the objects. Each object is then in a circular orbit of radius R/2 about the center of mass, which is halfway between them.

Outline:

We follow the derivation for small planet/star mass ratio given at http://www.phy6.org/stargaze/Slagrang.htm, without making the small-ratio approximations that are incorporated there.

Planet/star mass ratio , with

Equate the gravitational force (which acts at a distance R) with the centripetal force (for a circle of radius ):


Mult by R/m:

Substitute for

An small-mass object at the L1 point, a distance r from object m, will have an orbit with radius and the same period T:

,

so


Since T is the same for the planet and an object at the L1 point,


Divide through by GM


Templates for Math Objects

https://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_mathematical_formulas

text in math using mbox:

spaces ignored if using mathrm:

space characters using backslash:

Non-math

6.02 x 1023

small superscript: 10² 10²³

multiplier dot used in units: kg•m/s2

°C °F

Greek characters and other math formatting:

https://en.citizendium.org/wiki/CZ:How_to_edit_an_article#Character_formatting

x² ≥ 0