coefficient of linear expansion:coefficient of volume expansion:critical point:critical pressure:critical temperature:Dalton’s law of partial pressures:degree Celsius:degree Fahrenheit:dew point:Fahrenheit scale:ideal gas law:Kelvin scale:mole:PV diagram:partial pressure:percent relative humidity:phase diagram:relative humidity:saturation:sublimation:temperature:thermal energy:thermal equilibrium:thermal expansion:thermal stress:triple point:vapor pressure:vapor:zeroth law of thermodynamics:α, the change in length, per unit length, per1ºCchange in temperature; a constant used in the calculation of
linear expansion; the coefficient of linear expansion depends on the material and to some degree on the temperature of the materialβ, the change in volume, per unit volume, per1ºCchange in temperature
the temperature above which a liquid cannot existthe minimum pressure needed for a liquid to exist at the critical temperaturethe temperature above which a liquid cannot existthe physical law that states that the total pressure of a gas is the sum of partial pressures of the component
gasesunit on the Celsius temperature scaleunit on the Fahrenheit temperature scalethe temperature at which relative humidity is 100%; the temperature at which water starts to condense out of the airtemperature scale in which the freezing point of water is 32 ºFand the boiling point of water is 212 ºF
the physical law that relates the pressure and volume of a gas to the number of gas molecules or number of moles of gas and the
temperature of the gastemperature scale in which 0 K is the lowest possible temperature, representing absolute zerothe quantity of a substance whose mass (in grams) is equal to its molecular massa graph of pressure vs. volumethe pressure a gas would create if it occupied the total volume of space availablethe ratio of vapor density to saturation vapor densitya graph of pressure vs. temperature of a particular substance, showing at which pressures and temperatures the three phases of
the substance occurthe amount of water in the air relative to the maximum amount the air can holdthe condition of 100% relative humiditythe phase change from solid to gasthe quantity measured by a thermometerKE, the average translational kinetic energy of a molecule
the condition in which heat no longer flows between two objects that are in contact; the two objects have the same
temperaturethe change in size or volume of an object with change in temperaturestress caused by thermal expansion or contractionthe pressure and temperature at which a substance exists in equilibrium as a solid, liquid, and gasthe pressure at which a gas coexists with its solid or liquid phasea gas at a temperature below the boiling temperaturelaw that states that if two objects are in thermal equilibrium, and a third object is in thermal equilibrium with one
of those objects, it is also in thermal equilibrium with the other objectSection Summary
13.1 Temperature
- Temperature is the quantity measured by a thermometer.
- Temperature is related to the average kinetic energy of atoms and molecules in a system.
- Absolute zero is the temperature at which there is no molecular motion.
- There are three main temperature scales: Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin.
- Temperatures on one scale can be converted to temperatures on another scale using the following equations:
TºF=^9
5
TºC+ 32
464 CHAPTER 13 | TEMPERATURE, KINETIC THEORY, AND THE GAS LAWS
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