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A very tall building has a height H0 on a cool spring day when the temperature is T0. You decide to use the building as a sort of giant thermometer on a hot summer day by carefully measuring its height. Suppose you do this and discover that the building is a length h taller than it was on the cool spring day where h is much much less than H0. Assume the entire frame of the building is made of steel, which has a coefficient of linear expansion αsteel.

Required:
What is the temperature, assuming that the building is in thermal equilibrium with the air and that its entire frame is made of steel?

User Tim Rupe
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

The temperature is
T = (h)/(H_O \alpha_(steel) ) + T_O

Step-by-step explanation:

From the question we are told that

The height on a cool spring day is
H_O

The temperature on a cool spring day is
T_O

The difference in height between a cool spring day and a summer day is h

The coefficient of static friction is
\alpha _(steel)

The mathematical relation for the linear expansion of the steel buiding is represented as


h = H_o \alpha_(steel) [T-T_O]

Where T is the temperature of the steel during summer

Now making T the subject we have


T = (h)/(H_O \alpha_(steel) ) + T_O

User Voonic
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