The first law of thermodynamics says that the variation of internal energy of a system is given by:

where Q is the heat delivered by the system, while W is the work done on the system.
We must be careful with the signs here. The sign convention generally used is:
Q positive = Q absorbed by the system
Q negative = Q delivered by the system
W positive = W done on the system
W negative = W done by the system
So, in our problem, the heat is negative because it is releaed by the system:
Q=-1275 J
while the work is positive because it is performed by the surrounding on the system:
W=+855 J
So, the variation of internal energy of the system is
Answer:
The torque on the child is now the same, τ.
Explanation:
- It can be showed that the external torque applied by a net force on a rigid body, is equal to the product of the moment of inertia of the body with respect to the axis of rotation, times the angular acceleration.
- In this case, as the movement of the child doesn't create an external torque, the torque must remain the same.
- The moment of inertia is the sum of the moment of inertia of the merry-go-round (the same that for a solid disk) plus the product of the mass of the child times the square of the distance to the center.
- When the child is standing at the edge of the merry-go-round, the moment of inertia is as follows:

- When the child moves to a position half way between the center and the edge of the merry-go-round, the moment of inertia of the child decreases, as the distance to the center is less than before, as follows:

- Since the angular acceleration increases from α to 2*α, we can write the torque expression as follows:
τ = 3/4*m*r² * (2α) = 3/2*m*r²
same result than in (2), so the torque remains the same.
Answer: 8.1 x 10^24
Explanation:
I(t) = (0.6 A) e^(-t/6 hr)
I'll leave out units for neatness: I(t) = 0.6e^(-t/6)
If t is in seconds then since 1hr = 3600s: I(t) = 0.6e^(-t/(6 x 3600) ).
For neatness let k = 1/(6x3600) = 4.63x10^-5, then:
I(t) = 0.6e^(-kt)
Providing t is in seconds, total charge Q in coulombs is
Q= ∫ I(t).dt evaluated from t=0 to t=∞.
Q = ∫(0.6e^(-kt)
= (0.6/-k)e^(-kt) evaluated from t=0 to t=∞.
= -(0.6/k)[e^-∞ - e^-0]
= -0.6/k[0 - 1]
= 0.6/k
= 0.6/(4.63x10^-5)
= 12958 C
Since the magnitude of the charge on an electron = 1.6x10⁻¹⁹ C, the number of electrons is 12958/(1.6x10^-19) = 8.1x10^24 to two significant figures.