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I was reading an old thermodynamics textbook and came across this equation describing change in internal energy. What does the (dU/dT)V and (dU/dV)T mean? I think it’s partial derivatives, but I’ve never seen a derivative sub (something). Please help

I was reading an old thermodynamics textbook and came across this equation describing-example-1

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Step-by-step explanation:

I remember that notation! The expression


dQ = dU = ((\partial U)/(\partial T))_(V) dT+ ((\partial U)/(\partial V))_(T)dV

is the 1st law of thermodynamics and it refers to the heat supplied to the system dQ which is also a change in its internal energy dU. The first term is the partial derivative of the internal energy U with respect to temperature T while the volume V is kept constant, as denoted by the subscript V. The 2nd term is similar but this time, temperature is kept constant while its volume partial derivative is being taken.

Ah, memories!

User Adam Easterling
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