Cuesta College, San Luis Obispo, CA
Cf. Giambattista/Richardson/Richardson, Physics, 2/e, Comprehensive Problem 14.102
[20 points.] A 0.44 kg lead slug leaves a rifle at a temperature of 155 degrees C and travels at a speed of 190 m/s until it hits a 20.0 kg block of ice at 0 degrees C and comes to a rest within it. Determine how much ice will melt. Show your work and explain your reasoning.
(Specific heat of lead is 0.13 kJ/(kg*K); specific heat of ice is 2.1 kJ/(kg*K); latent heat of fusion for water is 333.7 (kJ/kg) ; specific heat of water is 4.19 kJ/(kg*K).)
Solution and grading rubric:
- p = 20/20:
Correct. The kinetic energy of the bullet that is lost (7,942 J) as it comes to a complete stop, along with the heat it gives up as it cools down to 0 degrees C (8,866) is equal to the heat absorbed by the ice as it melts (16,808 J), and the resulting mass of ice melting is found to be 0.0504 kg. - r = 16/20:
Nearly correct, but includes minor math errors. - t = 12/20:
Nearly correct, but approach has conceptual errors, and/or major/compounded math errors. Does not include the kinetic energy of the bullet. - v = 8/20:
Implementation of right ideas, but in an inconsistent, incomplete, or unorganized manner. - x = 4/20:
Implementation of ideas, but credit given for effort rather than merit. - y = 2/20:
Irrelevant discussion/effectively blank. - z = 0/20:
Blank.
Grading distribution:
Sections 30880, 30881
p: 2 students
r: 5 students
t: 22 students
v: 9 students
x: 0 students
y: 0 students
z: 1 student
A sample "p" response (from student 5225):
A sample "r" response (from student 0008), with a kJ to J conversion error:
Another sample "r" response (from student 1830), with similar kJ to J conversion errors, but no explicit calculation for the amount of ice melted:
Another sample "r" response (from student 1990), with similar kJ to J conversion errors, coming to the conclusion that the entire ice block would melt:
Another sample "r" response (from student 6447), again with similar kJ to J conversion errors and concluding that the entire ice block would melt:
A sample "t" response (from student 1807), with no kinetic energy of the bullet:
Another sample "t" response (from student 1991), again with no kinetic energy of the bullet:
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