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Temperature
Energy
Heat
Entropy
Estimated Time: 15 minutes
Students are given several small white board questions and asked to note the difference between temperature, energy, heat, and entropy.
This series of questions works well with little introduction or lead-in. The class is asked the questions:
SWBQ: “What is energy? What kind of a thing is energy?”
SWBQ: “What is entropy? What kind of a thing is entropy?”
SWBQ: “What is temperature? What kind of a thing is temperature?”
SWBQ: “What is heat? What kind of a thing is heat?
The instructor should collect white boards after each question is asked so that student answers can be compared and discussed. A short discussion on the similarities and differences between temperature, energy, and heat can occur before the question on entropy since entropy is typically the more challenging question of the four.
Here are some possible student answers:
Energy:
Entropy:
Temperature:
It is the same for objects in equilibrium.
Measures how hot things are.
Kinetic energy.
Greater than absolute zero
Celsius/Kelvin/Fahrenheit
I'm sure there is more
Heat:
Possible conversations
Energy:
How many forms could it take?
How do we know if it is something “real”?
Can we measure energy? Changes in energy? How?
Is energy a property of an object, like mass?
Entropy:
How would you quantify disorder? (if that is entropy)
When might entropy decrease?
If entropy increases, where does it come from?
Can we measure entropy? Changes in entropy? How?
Is entropy a property of an object?
Temperature:
Heat:
For this series of questions, the important conclusions students will make should surface in the presentation and class discussion of each small white board after each question is asked. After leaving this activity, students should know that:
Temperature has the property that energy is spontaneously transfered from hotter objects to colder ones. Temperature is related to the kinetic energy of an object's molecules. As the temperature increases, vibrations in the molecules of an object increase.
Energy is something that is conserved, and is required to do work. For this course, the ability to do thermodynamic work, or transfer energy via heat, will be of particular importance.
Heat is energy that is transfered spontaneously from something that is hotter to something that is colder. There are also special cases of irreversible processes where energy-transfer is considered heat even though it doesn't correspond to transfer from something hotter to something colder, but we don't need to bring this up at this stage.
Entropy is an extensive property of an object (or other system). It can be understood the disorder of a system, but that is a bit hard to quantify. at this stage we will choose to define changes in entropy using an integral of the heat.