Okay Veeky Forums If I have 2 buckets filled with a liquid that is 100 degrees hot and then I mix the liquids together will it become 100 degrees hotter or stay the same?
Okay Veeky Forums If I have 2 buckets filled with a liquid that is 100 degrees hot and then I mix the liquids together...
Stays the same
You'll just have double the volume
May I ask why?
>May I ask why?
temperature is a measure of energy DENSITY
how else did you think it would work?
No way. I come from /b/ fuck off fag thank you by the way
You get 2 buckets at 200 degrees
You have to convert to Kelvins to solve
Each one is 373.15K, so the resulting mixture is 746.30K, or 473.15°
If your hands are the same temperature and you touch them together, would they suddenly get hotter or would you just not feel anything?
PV=nRT
No
They get so hot I get third degree burns. Everyfuckingtime
You'll end up with a bucket full of 100 degree water and a wet floor
If I had an object that was 1000 degrees C and held a 500 degree flame under it would the object cool down?
But at 100 degrees it would be steam
t. thermodynamics pro
no. i bet you live on the surface, you subhuman trash
you idiot, it was 100 degrees hot, not Celsius
Well if the surrounding is cooler it would cool down around until 500degrees at which point it would halt cooling off. so yes
if my house is -1000 degrees and i set the AC to -500 degrees will my house heat up?
>not all liquids boil at 100
Waste of quads
First law of thermodynamics. look it up.
>using ideal gas law on liquids
>implying it isnt just a theory
slow down there
>Summer
>House is hot, 80 degrees
>Turn on A/C, set it to 70 degrees
>House heats up to 150 degrees and I die
If the first liquid is 100 degrees hot to the left and the second is 100 degrees hot to the right, both directions cancel each other out, so the result will be zero degrees hot.
If the initial liquids had a hotness of length a, the mixture will have a hotness of length a*sin(40°)/sin(80°).