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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!agate!dog.ee.lbl.gov!csa3.lbl.gov!sichase
- From: sichase@csa3.lbl.gov (SCOTT I CHASE)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Re: PLEASE HELP!
- Date: 20 Nov 1992 08:50 PST
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory - Berkeley, CA, USA
- Lines: 26
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <20NOV199208500726@csa3.lbl.gov>
- References: <q1TiuB3w165w@inqmind.bison.mb.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 128.3.254.198
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-
- In article <q1TiuB3w165w@inqmind.bison.mb.ca>, norm@inqmind.bison.mb.ca (Norman P. Paterson) writes...
-
- >- Take a aluminium ball with a voulume of 100 cu/meters. Say that this
- >ball is indestructible. The ball is filled with helium gas on the ground
- >(the gas is 99.9% pure). Now, take this ball to an alititude of 100,000
- >feet. What would the internal pressure be of the ball (or helium)?
-
- Since you have chosen an aluminum ball rather than a bag, the total volume
- of the helium will remain unchanged. So the equation of state, PV = NRT
- will give you Pfinal/Pinitial = Tfinal/Tinitial, i.e., the only thing
- you have to worry about is that it is cold up there and the pressure of the
- gas will decrease proportionately.
-
- If you had used an expandable bag instead, then the volume would change.
- The cold will naturally make the gas volume constract at constant pressure,
- but the atmospheric pressure is not constant. In fact, it decreases so
- much at 20 miles up that the volume of the gas in the bag will shoot way
- up in spite of the temperature decrease.
-
- -Scott
- --------------------
- Scott I. Chase "It is not a simple life to be a single cell,
- SICHASE@CSA2.LBL.GOV although I have no right to say so, having
- been a single cell so long ago myself that I
- have no memory at all of that stage of my
- life." - Lewis Thomas
-