A scientist working late at night in her low-temperature physics laboratory decides to have a cup of hot tea, but discovers the lab hot plate is broken. Not to be deterred, she puts about 8.00 oz of water, at 12.0°C, from the tap into a lab dewar (essentially a large thermos bottle) and begins shaking it up and down. With each shake the water is thrown up and falls back down a distance of 25.6 cm.
Is this practically possible?
"Q_0=2mgh,"
"Q=nQ_0=cm\u2206t,"
"n=\\frac{cm\u2206t}{2mgh}=\\frac{c\u2206t}{2gh},"
"T=\\frac n{T_0}=\\frac{c\u2206t}{2ghT_0}=31.4^h."
Impossible.
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