McGraw-Hill Education 500 Review Questions for the MCAT Physics 2nd

1

Heat Transfer and Thermal Properties

Chapter 1 Translational Motion

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Heat transfer by conduction depends on material properties and geometry, while thermal expansion causes predictable dimensional changes that affect both individual objects and systems of objects made from the same material.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Conduction rate factors: heat transfer by conduction is directly proportional to thermal conductivity, cross-sectional area, and temperature difference, but inversely proportional to length.
  • Conduction vs radiation: infrared radiation transfers energy through electromagnetic waves (e.g., feeling warmth from a stove), while conduction transfers energy through molecular vibration without molecules traveling.
  • Thermal expansion principle: objects expand when heated according to their coefficient of expansion; area expansion is approximately twice the linear expansion coefficient.
  • Common confusion: in conduction, energy transfers but molecules don't travel from one end to the other; the mechanism is molecular vibration, not mass transport.
  • Same-material systems: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate when heated together, maintaining their relative dimensional relationships.

🌡️ Heat transfer by conduction

🔢 The conduction formula

The rate of heat transfer through conduction follows this relationship:

  • Rate = (thermal conductivity × cross-sectional area × temperature difference) / length
  • Represented as: Q/t = (k × A × ΔT) / d

What increases conduction rate:

  • Larger cross-sectional area (A)
  • Greater temperature difference (ΔT)
  • Higher thermal conductivity (k)

What decreases conduction rate:

  • Greater length/thickness (d)

📐 Geometric effects

  • Doubling area (A): increases the rate of transfer proportionally
  • Doubling length (L): increases both the surface for energy absorption and the surface for energy dissipation
  • Example: A door with 500 W heat transfer—making it thicker reduces the rate; making it larger or increasing the temperature difference increases the rate

⚠️ Common mistake

Don't confuse specific heat with thermal conductivity:

  • Specific heat relates to energy storage capacity
  • Thermal conductivity relates to energy transfer rate
  • Only thermal conductivity appears in the conduction formula

🌊 Heat transfer mechanisms

📡 Infrared radiation

Infrared radiation: electromagnetic radiation that transfers energy without requiring physical contact or a medium.

  • Not within the visible light range
  • Example: feeling warmth when placing your hand near a warm stove—you are sensing infrared radiation
  • Different mechanism from conduction

🥄 Molecular mechanism in conduction

Key distinction: Energy transfers, but molecules don't travel

  • Energy moves through molecular vibration
  • Molecules remain in place while passing energy to neighbors
  • Example: A spoon in hot liquid—energy conducts from the hot end to the cool end, but the metal molecules don't migrate along the spoon

🔧 Thermal expansion

📏 Linear expansion

The change in length when an object is heated:

  • Formula structure: change in length = (coefficient of linear expansion) × (original length) × (temperature change)
  • Applies to one-dimensional changes

📐 Area expansion

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

  • For a flat plate: change in area = (coefficient of area expansion) × (original area) × (temperature change)
  • Example: A 0.1 m × 0.1 m plate (0.01 m² area) expands according to twice the linear coefficient

🔄 Same-material systems

Important principle: Objects made of the same material expand at the same rate

  • They share the same coefficient of expansion
  • All dimensions scale proportionally
  • Example: A ball and ring made of the same material—if the ball fits through the ring at room temperature, it will still fit when both are heated together, because both the ball diameter and ring diameter increase by the same amount

🔬 Temperature-dependent properties

📊 Properties that increase with temperature

PropertyBehavior
Electrical resistanceIncreases for most materials
Speed of sound in airIncreases
Gas volume (constant molecules)Increases
Gas pressure (constant volume)Increases (from PV = nRT)
Solid object lengthIncreases for most materials

📉 Properties that decrease with temperature

  • Gas density (when molecule count is constant): mass stays constant while volume increases, so density (mass/volume) decreases

⚙️ Work and ideal gases

🔄 Volume changes and work

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV (negative of pressure times change in volume)

Interpreting the sign:

  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done on the gas
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done by the gas
  • No volume change: no work is done

📍 Identifying work in process steps

  • Steps with constant volume (no ΔV): zero work
  • Steps with volume decrease: external force does work compressing the gas
  • Steps with volume increase: gas does work expanding itself
2

Heat Transfer and Thermal Properties

Chapter 2 Forces, Torque, and Equilibrium

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Heat transfer by conduction depends on material properties and geometry, while thermal expansion causes predictable dimensional changes that affect both the object and any openings within it equally when made of the same material.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Conduction rate factors: thermal conductivity, cross-sectional area, temperature difference (all increase rate), and length (inversely proportional—longer path decreases rate).
  • Radiation mechanism: infrared radiation transfers energy electromagnetically without requiring molecular travel, detectable as warmth near a heat source.
  • Thermal expansion principle: objects expand when heated; the key formula relates change in length to original length, temperature change, and material coefficient.
  • Common confusion: when a ball and ring made of the same material are heated together, both expand at the same rate, so the ball still fits through the ring—the opening expands too.
  • Material property variations: electrical resistance, sound speed, and gas pressure increase with temperature, while gas density (at constant mass) decreases.

🌡️ Heat conduction mechanics

🔥 The conduction rate formula

Rate of heat transfer by conduction: directly proportional to thermal conductivity, cross-sectional area, and temperature difference; inversely proportional to length.

  • Written as: Q/t depends on k (thermal conductivity), A (area), ΔT (temperature difference), and d or L (length/thickness).
  • Why each factor matters:
    • Larger area (A) → more surface for energy to pass through → faster transfer
    • Greater temperature difference (ΔT) → stronger driving force → faster transfer
    • Longer path (L) → more distance for energy to travel → slower transfer
    • Higher thermal conductivity (k) → material transmits heat more easily → faster transfer

🚪 Practical calculation example

The excerpt gives a door example:

  • Using the formula yields 500 W (or 500 J/s) as the rate of energy transfer.
  • Increasing door area or temperature difference increases heat loss.
  • Increasing door thickness decreases heat loss (acts as better insulation).

⚠️ Common mistake: specific heat vs thermal conductivity

  • Don't confuse: specific heat (energy needed to change temperature) is NOT the same as thermal conductivity (rate of heat transfer through a material).
  • For conduction problems, use thermal conductivity, not specific heat.

📡 Radiation and molecular motion

📡 Infrared radiation

  • Infrared is electromagnetic radiation, not within the visible range.
  • Example: feeling warmth when placing your hand near a stove—you're sensing infrared radiation.
  • Energy transfers without direct contact or molecular travel through space.

🥄 Conduction without molecular travel

  • Important distinction: in conduction (like through a metal spoon), energy transfers from molecule to molecule, but the molecules themselves don't travel from one end to the other.
  • The mechanism is vibrational energy transfer between adjacent molecules.

📏 Thermal expansion principles

📏 Linear expansion formula

Change in length formula: ΔL depends on the original length, coefficient of linear expansion, and temperature change.

  • The excerpt references this as the standard formula for determining length change during heating.
  • Coefficient of expansion is a material property—different materials expand at different rates.

🔲 Area expansion

  • Key approximation: coefficient of area expansion ≈ twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Example calculation in excerpt: original plate area 0.01 m² expands according to this doubled coefficient.
  • This applies to two-dimensional expansion (surfaces, openings).

🎯 Ball-and-ring scenario

  • When a ball and ring are made of the same material, they have the same coefficient of expansion.
  • Both expand at the same rate when heated together.
  • Result: the ball's diameter and the ring's inner diameter increase by the same amount → the ball still fits through the ring.
  • Don't confuse: the opening doesn't stay the same size—it expands proportionally with the rest of the object.

🌡️ Temperature-dependent properties

📊 How properties change with temperature

PropertyChange with increasing temperatureNote
Electrical resistanceIncreasesFor most materials
Sound speed in airIncreases-
Gas volumeIncreasesAt constant pressure
Gas densityDecreasesAt constant mass (mass/volume ratio drops)
Gas pressureIncreasesAt constant volume (from PV = nRT)
Solid lengthIncreasesThermal expansion

🎈 Gas behavior

  • Using the ideal gas law (PV = nRT):
    • If volume is constant and temperature increases → pressure increases.
    • If pressure is constant and temperature increases → volume increases.
    • If number of molecules (mass) is constant but volume increases → density decreases.

⚙️ Work and gas compression

⚙️ Work formula for gases

  • Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV (negative of pressure times volume change).
  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done ON the gas by an external force.
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done BY the gas.

📉 Volume-change scenarios

The excerpt describes a multi-step process:

  • No volume change (steps II and IV): no work is done on or by the gas.
  • Volume increases (step III): gas expands, so work is done BY the gas.
  • Volume decreases (step I): compression occurs, so work is done ON the gas by an external force.
3

Heat Transfer and Thermal Properties

Chapter 3 Work and Energy

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Heat transfer by conduction depends on material properties and geometry, while thermal expansion causes predictable dimensional changes that affect both the object and any openings within it equally when made of the same material.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Conduction rate factors: thermal conductivity, cross-sectional area, temperature difference (all increase rate), and length (decreases rate).
  • Infrared radiation: electromagnetic radiation that transfers energy without requiring physical contact or molecular travel.
  • Thermal expansion principle: objects expand when heated; the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Common confusion: when a ball and ring are made of the same material and heated together, both expand at the same rate—the ball still fits through the ring.
  • Work and gas volume: work is done on a gas when it is compressed (volume decreases); work is done by a gas when it expands (volume increases).

🌡️ Heat transfer by conduction

🔢 The conduction formula components

Rate of heat transfer by conduction is directly proportional to thermal conductivity, cross-sectional area, and temperature difference, and inversely proportional to length.

The formula uses:

  • k: thermal conductivity of the material
  • A: cross-sectional area through which energy transfers
  • ΔT: temperature difference between hot and cold regions
  • L: length through which energy is transferred

⬆️ What increases conduction rate

  • Doubling area (A): increases the rate of transfer proportionally
  • Larger temperature difference (ΔT): increases the rate
  • Higher thermal conductivity (k): increases the rate

Example: A door with 500 W heat transfer rate—this equals 500 J/s, showing energy flow per unit time.

⬇️ What decreases conduction rate

  • Increasing length (L): decreases the rate (more distance to travel)
  • Decreasing cross-sectional area: reduces transfer capacity
  • Smaller temperature difference: less driving force for heat flow

Don't confuse: Specific heat is not used in conduction rate calculations; it relates to energy storage, not transfer rate.

🔴 Infrared radiation mechanism

📡 Electromagnetic energy transfer

  • Infrared radiation is electromagnetic radiation, not within the visible range
  • Transfers energy without requiring physical contact
  • Example: sensing warmth when placing your hand near a stove—you detect infrared radiation

🥄 Conduction vs molecular motion

  • In conduction (e.g., through a metal spoon), energy transfers but molecules do not travel from one end to the other
  • The mechanism involves energy passing between adjacent molecules, not mass transport

📏 Thermal expansion

📐 Linear expansion formula

The change in length when an object expands during heating follows a specific formula involving:

  • Original length
  • Coefficient of linear expansion
  • Temperature change

📦 Area expansion relationship

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

  • Original area example: a plate with 0.1 m sides has area = 0.01 m²
  • Apply the expansion formula using the doubled coefficient for area calculations

🔵 Same-material expansion behavior

When a ball and ring are made of the same material:

  • Both have the same coefficient of expansion
  • Both expand at the same rate when heated together
  • The ball's diameter and ring's diameter increase by the same amount
  • Result: the ball will still fit through the ring after heating

Don't confuse: It might seem the ball would get "too big," but the ring's opening expands proportionally.

🌡️ Temperature effects on material properties

📊 Property changes with temperature

PropertyChange with increasing temperature
Electrical resistanceIncreases (for most materials)
Speed of sound in airIncreases
Gas volume (constant molecules)Increases
Gas density (constant molecules)Decreases (mass constant, volume up)
Gas pressure (constant volume)Increases (from PV = nRT)
Solid object lengthIncreases (most materials)

⚙️ Work and ideal gases

🔽 Compression (work done on gas)

  • Work done on an ideal gas causes compression
  • Volume decreases: W = –PΔV
  • Example: In a process where volume decreases, an external force compresses the gas molecules

🔼 Expansion (work done by gas)

  • Gas expands → work is done by the gas
  • The gas uses energy to push outward and increase its volume

⏸️ No volume change = no work

  • When volume remains constant (no ΔV), no work is done on or by the gas
  • Example: In steps where pressure or temperature change but volume stays fixed, work equals zero
4

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 4 Fluids

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Materials expand predictably with temperature, and understanding thermal expansion coefficients explains why objects made of the same material expand proportionally, while gas behavior under heating depends on whether volume or pressure is held constant.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Thermal expansion is material-dependent: objects expand when heated, with the rate determined by their coefficient of expansion.
  • Same material = same expansion rate: a ball and ring made of the same material expand proportionally, maintaining their relative fit.
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion for a material.
  • Work and gas volume: work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume), while work done by a gas expands it (increases volume).
  • Common confusion: temperature effects vary by constraint—if volume is constant, pressure increases with temperature; if pressure is constant, volume increases.

🌡️ Temperature effects on physical properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

The excerpt lists several properties that change with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases with temperature for most materials
  • Speed of sound in air: increases with temperature
  • Gas volume: increases with temperature (when molecule count is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases with temperature (mass stays constant but volume increases)
  • Gas pressure: increases with temperature (when volume is held constant, using the relationship PV = nRT)
  • Solid object length: most solids increase in length with temperature

🔄 Don't confuse: constraint matters

The same gas behaves differently depending on what is held constant:

  • Constant volume → heating increases pressure
  • Constant pressure → heating increases volume
  • Constant mass → heating decreases density (because volume expands)

📏 Thermal expansion mechanics

📏 Linear expansion

The change in length of an object when it expands during heating follows a specific formula (referenced but not fully shown in excerpt).

  • Objects expand in a predictable way based on their material properties
  • The coefficient of linear expansion determines how much length changes per degree of temperature change

📐 Area expansion

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

  • For a flat plate, area expansion follows from linear expansion in two dimensions
  • Example: A plate with original area 0.01 m² (0.1 m × 0.1 m) expands according to this doubled coefficient
  • This approximation simplifies calculations for two-dimensional expansion

🔗 Same material, proportional expansion

The ball-and-ring scenario (problem 497):

  • A ball that fits through a ring when both are at the same temperature
  • Both made of the same material → both have the same coefficient of expansion
  • When heated together, both expand at the same rate
  • The ball's diameter and the ring's diameter increase by the same amount
  • Result: the ball still fits through the ring after heating

Don't confuse: if the materials were different, they would expand at different rates and the fit would change.

⚙️ Work and gas compression

⚙️ Work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV

  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done on the gas by an external force
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done by the gas
  • No volume change: no work is done on or by the gas

🔄 Identifying work in gas processes

The excerpt describes a multi-step process (steps I–IV):

  • Steps II and IV: no volume change → no work done
  • Step III: gas expands → work done by the gas
  • Step I: volume decreases → work done on the gas (compression by external force)

Example: Only when an external force compresses the gas (decreasing its volume) is work being done on the system of gas molecules.

5

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 5 Kinetic Theory of Gases

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Temperature changes cause predictable physical responses in materials and gases—most materials expand when heated, and gases follow specific pressure-volume-temperature relationships.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Temperature effects on materials: most materials increase electrical resistance, expand in length/volume, and sound travels faster through them when heated.
  • Uniform expansion principle: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate, maintaining relative fit even when heated together.
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion for a material.
  • Work and gas volume: work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume), while work done by a gas expands it (increases volume).
  • Common confusion: density decreases with temperature (at constant molecule count) because volume increases while mass stays constant.

🌡️ How temperature affects material properties

🔌 Electrical and acoustic changes

  • Electrical resistance: increases with temperature for most materials.
  • Sound speed: increases in air as temperature rises.
  • These are general trends observed across common materials.

📏 Thermal expansion of solids

  • Most solid objects increase in length when temperature rises.
  • The change in length follows a specific formula involving the coefficient of expansion.
  • Example: a metal rod becomes longer when heated; the amount depends on its original length, temperature change, and material properties.

💨 Gas behavior with temperature

Using the relationship PV = nRT (pressure × volume = number of moles × gas constant × temperature):

ConditionWhat happensWhy
Constant volumePressure increasesMore thermal energy means molecules hit walls harder
Constant molecule countDensity decreasesVolume expands but mass stays the same
General trendVolume increasesThermal energy causes expansion

🔄 Uniform expansion principle

🎯 Same material, same expansion rate

When a ball and ring are made of the same material, they have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

  • The diameter of both the ball and the ring increase by the same amount when heated together.
  • Key insight: the ball will still fit through the ring after heating because both expand proportionally.
  • Don't confuse: this only works when both objects are the same material—different materials expand at different rates.

📐 Linear vs area expansion

  • The coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • To find area change: use the original area (e.g., for a square plate: side squared) and apply the expansion formula with the area coefficient.
  • Example: a 0.1 m × 0.1 m plate has original area 0.01 m²; its area expansion uses twice the linear coefficient.

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

🔽 Work done on gas (compression)

  • Work done on an ideal gas causes compression—a decrease in volume.
  • Formula relationship: W = –PΔV (work equals negative pressure times volume change).
  • When volume decreases (ΔV is negative), work is positive, meaning external force compressed the gas.

🔼 Work done by gas (expansion)

  • When gas expands, work is done by the gas to push outward.
  • Volume increases (ΔV is positive), so work is negative in the formula (energy leaves the system).

⏸️ No volume change = no work

  • If there is no change in volume during a process step, no work is done on or by the gas molecules.
  • Example: in a multi-step gas process, only steps showing volume change involve work; constant-volume steps have zero work.
6

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 6 Electrostatics

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Thermal expansion occurs predictably in materials with the same coefficient expanding at the same rate, while work done on gases relates directly to volume changes during compression or expansion.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Thermal expansion principle: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate when heated, maintaining their relative dimensions.
  • Coefficient relationships: area expansion coefficient is approximately twice the linear expansion coefficient for a given material.
  • Work and volume in gases: work is done on a gas when it compresses (volume decreases) and by a gas when it expands (volume increases).
  • Common confusion: no work is done when volume remains constant, even if other properties like pressure or temperature change.
  • Temperature effects on properties: most materials show increased resistance, sound speed, pressure (at constant volume), and length with rising temperature, but gas density decreases.

🌡️ Thermal expansion behavior

🔄 Same-material expansion

  • When two objects are made of the same material, they share the same coefficient of expansion.
  • This means they expand at identical rates when heated together.
  • Example: A ball and ring made of the same material—if the ball initially fits through the ring, it will continue to fit as both are heated because both the ball's diameter and the ring's opening expand by the same amount.

📏 Linear vs area expansion

  • The coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • This relationship allows calculation of how flat surfaces expand when heated.
  • For a square plate, the original area can be calculated and then the expansion formula applied using the doubled coefficient.

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

🔽 Compression (work done on gas)

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV, where a decrease in volume indicates compression.

  • When volume decreases, work is done on the gas by an external force.
  • The negative sign in the formula reflects energy being added to the system.
  • Example: In a multi-step process, only the step showing volume decrease represents work done on the gas molecules.

🔼 Expansion (work done by gas)

  • When gas expands (volume increases), work is done by the gas.
  • The gas uses its internal energy to push outward and increase its volume.

⏸️ Constant volume processes

  • When there is no change in volume (ΔV = 0), no work is done on or by the gas.
  • Don't confuse: other properties like pressure or temperature may change, but without volume change, work equals zero.

🌡️ Temperature effects on material properties

PropertyEffect of temperature increaseExplanation from excerpt
Electrical resistanceIncreasesTrue for most materials
Sound speed in airIncreasesDirect relationship
Gas volumeIncreasesAt constant molecule number (using PV = nRT)
Gas densityDecreasesMass constant, volume increases, so mass/volume decreases
Pressure (constant volume)IncreasesFrom ideal gas law with fixed volume
Solid object lengthIncreasesMost solids expand when heated
7

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 7 Circuits

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Thermal expansion occurs predictably in materials with temperature changes, and understanding expansion coefficients along with gas volume-pressure relationships helps explain how objects behave when heated or compressed.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Thermal expansion principle: Most materials expand when heated—length, area, and volume all increase with temperature.
  • Same-material expansion: Objects made of the same material expand at the same rate because they share the same coefficient of expansion.
  • Area vs linear expansion: The coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Work and gas volume: Work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume), while work done by a gas expands it (increases volume).
  • Common confusion: Temperature affects different properties differently—volume increases but density decreases for gases at constant mass.

🌡️ Temperature effects on material properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

The excerpt lists several properties that change with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases with temperature for most materials
  • Speed of sound in air: increases with temperature
  • Gas volume: increases with temperature (when molecule count is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases with temperature (because mass stays constant while volume increases)
  • Gas pressure: increases with temperature (when volume is held constant, following PV = nRT)
  • Solid object length: most solids increase in length with temperature

Don't confuse: Volume going up does NOT mean density goes up—if mass is constant, density = mass/volume actually decreases.

🔄 The ball-and-ring scenario

When a ball and ring are made of the same material and heated together:

  • Both have the same coefficient of expansion
  • Both expand at the same rate
  • The ball's diameter and the ring's diameter increase by the same amount
  • Result: if the ball fit through the ring initially, it will continue to fit as both are heated

Example: A metal ball that barely fits through a metal ring (same material) will still fit when both are heated to the same temperature, because both diameters grow proportionally.

📏 Expansion coefficients and formulas

📏 Linear expansion

The excerpt mentions a formula for change in length when an object expands during heating (specific formula not fully shown in excerpt).

📐 Area expansion relationship

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

Application example from the excerpt:

  • Original area of a plate: (0.1 m)² = 0.01 m²
  • This relationship is applied to an expansion formula to calculate area change

This 2× relationship is a key approximation for solving area expansion problems.

⚙️ Work and gas compression

⚙️ Work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV

This means:

  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done ON the gas by an external force
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done BY the gas

🔄 Multi-step gas processes

The excerpt describes a four-step process:

StepVolume changeWork interpretation
IDecreaseWork done on the gas (compression)
IINo changeNo work done
IIIIncreaseWork done by the gas (expansion)
IVNo changeNo work done

Key insight: Only when volume changes does work occur. The direction of volume change determines whether work is done on or by the gas.

8

Chapter 8 Sound

Chapter 8 Sound

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains only problem solutions related to thermal expansion, gas behavior, and material properties, with no substantive content about sound.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not contain material about sound or acoustics.
  • Content focuses on thermal physics: electrical resistance, gas laws, thermal expansion, and work done on gases.
  • The excerpt includes problem solutions numbered 496–500 and a table of contents fragment.
  • No core concepts, mechanisms, or theories about sound are present to extract.

🔍 Content assessment

🔍 What the excerpt contains

The provided text includes:

  • Solutions to physics problems about temperature effects on materials and gases
  • A table of contents listing chapters on mechanics, forces, work, energy, and fluids
  • Blank note pages
  • No discussion of sound waves, acoustics, frequency, amplitude, or related topics

⚠️ Mismatch with title

  • The title indicates "Chapter 8 Sound" but the excerpt does not contain sound-related content.
  • The excerpt appears to be from a different section of a physics textbook or problem set.
  • Cannot produce meaningful review notes about sound from material that does not discuss it.

📋 Actual content summary

🌡️ Thermal expansion problems

The excerpt includes solutions discussing:

  • How temperature affects electrical resistance, sound speed in air, gas density, and solid dimensions
  • Coefficient of thermal expansion and how objects of the same material expand at the same rate
  • Formulas for calculating length and area changes during heating

⚙️ Gas behavior

  • Work done on ideal gases relates to volume changes (compression or expansion)
  • Steps where volume remains constant involve no work
  • Gas expansion means work is done by the gas; compression means work is done on the gas
9

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 9 Electromagnetic Radiation and Optics

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Thermal expansion affects materials predictably—most materials expand with heat at rates determined by their coefficients of expansion, and gases follow specific pressure-volume-temperature relationships.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Thermal expansion principle: Most materials (solids, liquids, gases) expand when heated; electrical resistance and sound speed also increase with temperature.
  • Coefficient of expansion: Materials made of the same substance expand at the same rate, so relative dimensions are preserved during heating.
  • Area vs linear expansion: The coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion for a material.
  • Gas work and volume: Work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume); work done by a gas expands it (increases volume); no volume change means no work.
  • Common confusion: Gas density decreases with temperature (at constant mass) because volume increases, even though the gas expands.

🌡️ How materials respond to temperature

🌡️ General expansion behavior

Most materials exhibit predictable changes with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance increases
  • Speed of sound in air increases
  • Gas volume increases (at constant pressure)
  • Solid objects increase in length
  • Gas pressure increases (at constant volume, using PV = nRT)

📉 Gas density and temperature

At constant mass, gas density (mass/volume) decreases with temperature because volume increases.

  • Don't confuse: the gas is expanding, but because mass stays the same, density goes down.
  • The relationship follows from density = mass/volume.

🔧 Coefficient of expansion

🔧 Same material, same expansion rate

Materials made of the same substance have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

Example from the excerpt: A ball and ring made of the same material both expand equally when heated together—the ball's diameter and the ring's opening both grow by the same amount, so the ball continues to fit through the ring.

📐 Linear vs area expansion

The excerpt provides an important approximation:

TypeCoefficient relationship
Linear expansionBase coefficient (α)
Area expansionApproximately 2 × linear coefficient (2α)
  • This means a flat plate expands in area roughly twice as fast (per degree) as a rod expands in length.
  • The formula for expansion uses these coefficients to calculate change in dimensions.

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

⚙️ Work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV (negative of pressure times change in volume).

The sign convention:

  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done on the gas by an external force
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done by the gas
  • No volume change: no work is done

🔄 Identifying work in gas processes

The excerpt describes a multi-step process (steps I–IV):

  • Steps II and IV: no volume change → no work
  • Step III: gas expands → work done by the gas
  • Step I: volume decreases → work done on the gas (compression by external force)

Example: Only when an external force compresses the gas molecules (decreasing volume) is work done on the system.

10

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 10 Absorption Spectra

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Temperature changes cause predictable physical property changes in materials—including expansion in solids, pressure/volume relationships in gases, and material-specific behaviors that follow consistent mathematical patterns.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Temperature effects on properties: electrical resistance, sound speed, gas volume, and solid length all increase with temperature; gas density decreases.
  • Uniform expansion principle: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate, maintaining relative proportions.
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Work and gas volume: work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume); work done by a gas expands it (increases volume); no volume change means no work.
  • Common confusion: distinguishing when work is done on versus by a gas—look at whether volume decreases (compression) or increases (expansion).

🌡️ How temperature affects physical properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

The excerpt lists several property changes with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases for most materials
  • Sound speed in air: increases
  • Gas volume: increases (when molecule number is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases (because mass stays constant while volume increases)
  • Gas pressure: increases (when volume is held constant, using the relationship PV = nRT)
  • Solid object length: most solids increase in length

🔍 Why gas density decreases

  • Density is defined as mass divided by volume.
  • When temperature rises and the number of molecules stays constant, mass remains constant.
  • Volume increases with temperature.
  • Therefore: same mass ÷ larger volume = lower density.

📏 Thermal expansion in solids

📏 Same-material expansion

When a ball and ring are made of the same material, they have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

  • The coefficient of expansion determines how much a material grows per degree of temperature increase.
  • If two objects share the same material, they share the same coefficient.
  • Key insight: The diameter of the ball and the diameter of the ring increase by the same amount.
  • Example: A ball that barely fits through a ring will still fit when both are heated together, because both expand proportionally.

📐 Linear vs area expansion

The excerpt introduces an important approximation:

  • Coefficient of area expansion ≈ 2 × coefficient of linear expansion
  • This relationship is used to calculate how surface areas change with temperature.
  • Example calculation approach: find the original area (e.g., 0.1 m squared = 0.01 m²), then apply the expansion formula using the doubled coefficient.

📝 Change in length formula

The excerpt references a formula for determining length change during heating expansion (the specific formula is mentioned but not shown in detail in this portion).

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

⚙️ The work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV

  • The formula shows work equals negative pressure times change in volume.
  • The negative sign is key to understanding direction.

🔽 When work is done on the gas

  • Work done on a gas causes compression (volume decreases).
  • ΔV is negative (volume got smaller).
  • The negative sign in the formula makes W positive (work was input into the system).
  • Example: In a compression step where volume decreases, an external force did work to compress the gas molecules.

🔼 When work is done by the gas

  • When a gas expands, work is done by the gas.
  • ΔV is positive (volume got larger).
  • The gas used its own energy to push outward and expand itself.

⏸️ When no work occurs

  • No volume change = no work.
  • If volume stays constant (ΔV = 0), then W = 0.
  • Example: In steps where volume remains unchanged, no work is done on or by the gas molecules during those steps.

🧭 Distinguishing compression from expansion

ScenarioVolume changeWork directionWho does work
CompressionDecreases (ΔV < 0)Work done on gasExternal force
ExpansionIncreases (ΔV > 0)Work done by gasGas itself
Constant volumeNo change (ΔV = 0)No workNeither

Don't confuse: The sign of ΔV tells you the direction—negative means compression (work input), positive means expansion (work output).

11

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 11 Geometric Optics

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Materials expand predictably with temperature changes, and understanding expansion coefficients explains why objects made of the same material expand proportionally and how gases behave under compression and expansion.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Same-material expansion: Objects made of the same material have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate when heated together.
  • Area vs linear expansion: The coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion for a material.
  • Work and gas volume: Work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume), while work done by a gas expands it (increases volume).
  • Common confusion: Don't confuse "work done on" vs "work done by" a gas—compression means work is done on the gas; expansion means the gas does work.
  • Temperature effects on properties: Most materials show increased electrical resistance, sound speed, gas volume, gas pressure (at constant volume), and solid length as temperature rises; gas density decreases.

🌡️ Temperature effects on material properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

The excerpt lists several properties that change with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases with temperature for most materials
  • Speed of sound in air: increases with temperature
  • Gas volume: increases with temperature (when number of molecules is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases with temperature (since mass stays constant but volume increases)
  • Gas pressure: increases with temperature when volume is kept constant (following the relationship PV = nRT)
  • Solid object length: most solid objects increase in length with temperature

🔄 Thermal expansion principles

🔄 Same-material expansion

When a ball and ring are made of the same material, they have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

  • The diameter of both objects increases by the same amount when heated
  • Example: A ball that just fits through a ring will still fit when both are heated together, because both the ball diameter and ring diameter grow proportionally
  • This is because the coefficient of expansion depends on the material, not the object's shape

📐 Linear vs area expansion

The excerpt provides an important approximation:

  • Coefficient of area expansion ≈ 2 × coefficient of linear expansion
  • This relationship helps calculate how flat surfaces expand
  • Example: For a plate with original area 0.01 m², you can use this doubled coefficient to find the new area after heating

📏 Length change formula

The excerpt references a formula for determining the change in length of an object during thermal expansion (specific formula details are mentioned but not fully shown in the excerpt).

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

⚙️ Work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV

This means:

  • Compression (volume decreases): work is done on the gas by an external force
  • Expansion (volume increases): work is done by the gas
  • No volume change: no work is done on or by the gas

🔍 Identifying work in gas processes

The excerpt describes a multi-step process:

StepVolume changeWork interpretation
Step IDecreaseWork done on the gas (compression)
Step IINo changeNo work done
Step IIIIncreaseWork done by the gas (expansion)
Step IVNo changeNo work done

Don't confuse: The sign matters—negative volume change (compression) means positive work is done on the system; positive volume change (expansion) means the gas does positive work on its surroundings.

12

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 12 Atomic Nucleus

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Temperature changes cause predictable physical property changes in materials—most solids expand, gases increase in pressure or volume, and materials with the same composition expand at matching rates.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Temperature effects on properties: electrical resistance, sound speed, gas volume increase with temperature; gas density decreases when mass is constant.
  • Uniform expansion principle: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate, maintaining relative fit (ball-and-ring example).
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Work and gas volume: work is done on a gas when it compresses (volume decreases) and by a gas when it expands; no work occurs at constant volume.
  • Common confusion: distinguishing when work is done on vs by a gas—compression means external work input, expansion means the gas does work.

🌡️ How temperature affects physical properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

The excerpt lists several property changes with increasing temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases for most materials
  • Sound speed in air: increases
  • Gas volume: increases (when molecule count is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases (because mass stays constant while volume grows—density equals mass divided by volume)
  • Gas pressure: increases (when volume is held constant, using the relationship pressure times volume equals number of moles times gas constant times temperature)
  • Solid length: most solid objects increase in length

🔍 Don't confuse: volume vs density

When a gas heats up at constant mass:

  • Volume goes up
  • Density goes down (same mass spread over larger volume)

🔧 Thermal expansion mechanics

🔧 Same-material expansion

When a ball and ring are made of the same material, they have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

  • Key insight: the diameter of the ball and the diameter of the ring increase by the same amount when heated together.
  • Result: if the ball fits through the ring initially, it will still fit after both are heated.
  • Example: A metal ball that barely passes through a metal ring (same material) will still pass through when both are heated uniformly.

📐 Linear vs area expansion

The excerpt provides an important approximation:

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

  • Application: to find how a flat plate's area changes, use twice the linear coefficient.
  • The excerpt mentions a formula for expansion (specific formula details are referenced but not fully shown).
  • Example calculation context: a plate with original area of 0.01 square meters (0.1 m squared).

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

⚙️ When work is done

Work done on an ideal gas: W = negative pressure times change in volume

The relationship between work and volume change:

SituationVolume changeWork direction
CompressionDecreasesWork done on the gas (by external force)
ExpansionIncreasesWork done by the gas
Constant volumeNo changeNo work done

🔄 Multi-step process example

The excerpt describes a four-step process:

  • Steps II and IV: no volume change → no work done
  • Step III: gas expands → work done by the gas
  • Step I: volume decreases → work done on the gas (compression by external force)

Don't confuse: "work on the gas" (compression, external energy input) vs "work by the gas" (expansion, gas does work on surroundings).

13

Thermal Expansion and Gas Behavior

Chapter 13 Electronic Structure

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Temperature changes cause predictable physical responses in materials—most expand when heated, and gases follow specific pressure-volume-temperature relationships that determine when work is done.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Temperature effects on materials: electrical resistance, sound speed, gas volume, and solid length all increase with temperature; gas density decreases.
  • Uniform expansion principle: objects made of the same material expand at the same rate, maintaining relative fit.
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.
  • Work and gas volume: work is done on a gas when it compresses (volume decreases) and by a gas when it expands (volume increases); no work occurs at constant volume.
  • Common confusion: distinguishing when work is done on vs by a gas depends on whether volume decreases or increases.

🌡️ How temperature affects physical properties

🌡️ General temperature relationships

Most physical properties change predictably with temperature:

  • Electrical resistance: increases with temperature for most materials
  • Sound speed in air: increases with temperature
  • Gas volume: increases with temperature (at constant molecule number)
  • Gas density: decreases with temperature (mass stays constant, volume increases)
  • Solid length: most objects increase in length when heated

📐 Pressure-volume-temperature law

The excerpt references the relationship PV = nRT:

  • If volume is held constant, pressure increases with temperature
  • This explains why sealed containers can burst when heated

🔄 Thermal expansion principles

🔄 Same-material expansion

Objects made of the same material have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate.

Example: A ball that just fits through a ring at room temperature will still fit when both are heated together, because:

  • Both ball diameter and ring diameter increase by the same amount
  • The relative fit is preserved

Don't confuse: This only applies when both objects are the same material; different materials expand at different rates.

📏 Linear vs area expansion

The excerpt states an important approximation:

  • Coefficient of area expansion ≈ 2 × coefficient of linear expansion

For a square plate with side 0.1 m:

  • Original area = 0.01 m²
  • Area expansion follows a formula using twice the linear coefficient

⚙️ Work and gas compression

⚙️ When work is done

Work done on an ideal gas: W = –PΔV (negative because compression decreases volume)

The sign and presence of work depend on volume change:

ConditionVolume changeWork status
CompressionDecreases (ΔV < 0)Work done on the gas by external force
ExpansionIncreases (ΔV > 0)Work done by the gas
Constant volumeNo change (ΔV = 0)No work done

🔍 Identifying work in processes

Example from a multi-step gas process:

  • Steps with no volume change → no work
  • Step with expansion → work done by the gas
  • Step with compression → work done on the gas (only this step shows external work compressing the system)

Don't confuse: Work is about volume change, not pressure or temperature change alone.

14

Chapter 14 Thermochemistry and Thermodynamics

Chapter 14 Thermochemistry and Thermodynamics

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Temperature changes cause predictable physical property changes in materials—including thermal expansion, pressure-volume relationships in gases, and work done during compression or expansion—with the key insight that materials of the same composition expand at the same rate.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Temperature effects on physical properties: most materials show increased electrical resistance, sound speed, gas volume, gas pressure (at constant volume), and solid length as temperature rises; gas density decreases.
  • Thermal expansion principle: objects made of the same material have the same coefficient of expansion and expand at the same rate when heated together.
  • Area vs linear expansion: the coefficient of area expansion is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion for a material.
  • Work and gas volume: work done on a gas compresses it (decreases volume); work done by a gas expands it (increases volume); no volume change means no work.
  • Common confusion: don't assume a ball won't fit through a ring when both are heated—if they're the same material, both expand equally and the fit remains unchanged.

🌡️ Temperature effects on material properties

🌡️ General property changes with heating

When temperature increases, most materials exhibit these changes:

  • Electrical resistance: increases for most materials
  • Speed of sound in air: increases
  • Gas volume: increases (when molecule count is constant)
  • Gas density: decreases (mass stays constant but volume increases, so mass/volume decreases)
  • Gas pressure: increases (when volume is held constant, using the relationship PV = nRT)
  • Solid length: most solid objects increase in length

Example: If you heat a metal wire, it will conduct electricity less efficiently (higher resistance) and become slightly longer.

🔍 The ideal gas relationship

The excerpt references PV = nRT to explain pressure-temperature behavior:

  • If volume is kept constant and temperature rises, pressure must increase proportionally
  • If pressure is kept constant and temperature rises, volume must increase
  • This relationship governs how gases respond to thermal energy

🔧 Thermal expansion mechanics

📏 Linear expansion formula

The formula to determine the change in length of an object when it expands during heating involves the coefficient of linear expansion.

The excerpt mentions this formula exists but does not provide the full expression in the visible text.

📐 Area expansion relationship

The coefficient of area expansion for a material is approximately twice the coefficient of linear expansion.

  • This is a key approximation for two-dimensional expansion
  • Example problem approach: For a plate with original area 0.01 m² (from 0.1 m sides), apply the area expansion formula using twice the linear coefficient
  • Don't confuse: area expansion is not simply linear expansion applied twice—it follows its own proportional relationship

🔄 Same-material expansion principle

Ball-and-ring scenario (Question 497):

  • A ball and ring made of the same material have the same coefficient of expansion
  • When heated together, both the ball's diameter and the ring's diameter increase by the same amount
  • Result: if the ball fit through the ring initially, it will continue to fit as both are heated
  • Common mistake: assuming the ball will get "too big" for the ring—but the ring opening grows at exactly the same rate

⚙️ Work and gas volume changes

⚙️ Work-volume relationship

Work done on an ideal gas causes a compression, or decrease in volume, of the gas (W = –PΔV).

Key principles:

  • Work done ON the gas: compression occurs, volume decreases
  • Work done BY the gas: expansion occurs, volume increases
  • No volume change: no work is done (ΔV = 0 means W = 0)

📊 Multi-step process analysis

The excerpt describes a four-step gas process:

StepVolume changeWork interpretation
IDecreaseWork done ON the gas (compression by external force)
IINo changeNo work done
IIIIncreaseWork done BY the gas (expansion)
IVNo changeNo work done

Example: Only in step I is work done on the system—an external force compresses the gas molecules, reducing their volume.

Don't confuse: "work done on" vs "work done by"—the direction matters for understanding energy transfer and volume changes.

    McGraw-Hill Education 500 Review Questions for the MCAT Physics 2nd | Thetawave AI – Best AI Note Taker for College Students