Latent Heat of Fusion and Vaporization | Doc Physics

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
  • We investigate why Home Depot is better than Lowe's. Or is it the other way around?

КОМЕНТАРІ • 180

  • @John-ti8bf
    @John-ti8bf 7 років тому +214

    This is what happens when a physics student tries to explain something to his stoned friend.

  • @k-waympati2800
    @k-waympati2800 10 років тому +9

    These videos are excellent for cramming... short and straight to the point...

  • @Rose1997011
    @Rose1997011 7 років тому +1

    Hi
    1 year ago I was doing my AS and ur videos helped me get an A and a year later, here I am studying similar things are referring to the same amazing videos of yours.
    Many thanks Doc !!

  • @nightfox380
    @nightfox380 8 років тому +6

    love the peanut gallery remarks in the background

  • @Shayne2110
    @Shayne2110 8 років тому +31

    do you wanna yeah?
    do u have a yeah?
    yeah.
    XD

  • @ryanhellier5093
    @ryanhellier5093 6 років тому +2

    “... I don’t remember that” (no pause between comments) “YEAH YOU DO.”😂😂

  • @variousmentalproblems
    @variousmentalproblems 10 років тому +5

    Will is my favorite human being.

  • @directioneremo826
    @directioneremo826 8 років тому +1

    great video :)..... you explain so much better than the teachers in my school, they barely speak good English :p

  • @ayonmukherji
    @ayonmukherji 9 років тому +1

    Just saw this now. Evaporation and boiling are two separate things. We're studying these differences in our curriculum, I suggest you annotate a correction, cuz we don't want others viewing this to get confused.
    Great video tho! :)

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому

      +ayon mukherji Thank you! That was sloppy of me, indeed!

    • @ayonmukherji
      @ayonmukherji 9 років тому +2

      +Doc Schuster Oops. sorry for so many replies. there was a glitch on my iPad, it kept saying error.
      but seriously, I love the way you explain, and I can see that ur passionate. also you respond. Thank you so much!

  • @anber4129
    @anber4129 5 років тому +2

    Wow, you are amazing!! I love your passion for physics and science in general! Great vid! To the point and phenomenal. ☺️

  • @somi9891
    @somi9891 2 роки тому

    After 9 years, I'm watching this video cause now I'm having this concept in my school 😶
    Good explanation and Amazing video 😊

  • @MXUguitar
    @MXUguitar 10 років тому +8

    Great speaking voice :)

  • @vikkiernie8451
    @vikkiernie8451 8 років тому

    Great instructing video for my physics exam next week :)

  • @xeon9299
    @xeon9299 10 років тому +5

    great presentation and very entertaining

  • @abideleon6204
    @abideleon6204 10 років тому +3

    Melting called Heat of Fusion, the amount of head absorbed by the system to go from solid to liquid. The video indicated the fusion goes from liquid to solid and that's incorrect.

    • @Commonmischief
      @Commonmischief 9 років тому

      Very true!

    • @fayokanmifashanu1333
      @fayokanmifashanu1333 9 років тому

      It does latent heat of fusion

    • @mikhwan97
      @mikhwan97 7 років тому

      yeah I think so

    • @captainlevi2457
      @captainlevi2457 7 років тому +1

      actually latent heat of fusion is the amount of energy for a solid to undergo a phase change hence it is basically the energy needed for a solid to completely melt so general his statement was correct

  • @deservewatching-5481
    @deservewatching-5481 6 років тому

    very good >> no words... great way of giving a lecture... thanks DOC S.

  • @erich3892
    @erich3892 7 років тому

    Lovely father and son chemistry lesson

  • @xchopp
    @xchopp 4 роки тому

    This was great! I just wish some of the implications of condensing a lot of water vapor -- with the associated return of the **2.26 x10^6 J/kg of heat** -- had been woven into it. For example, the creation of an average-size cumulus cloud (made of liquid droplets from condensing of vapor onto nucleation aerosols) = the release of how much heat?
    A: A well-known meteorology textbook has this at about 1 Hiroshima-sized nuclear detonation. For just one cloud. At any rate, a _lot_of heat. I wonder what would happen if we gave our atmosphere more water vapor, say, by heating it up somehow? Oh wait, we don't have to wonder, it turns out we have been doing this very experiment for sometime now. More water vapor (in absolute, not relative terms) means more latent heat available to storms (oh, and more moisture too).

  • @mrbob55304
    @mrbob55304 4 роки тому +1

    Disclaimer: It's 1/14/20 and I haven't reviewed all 152 existing comments.
    The bottom or 'x' axis should be re-labeled 'Time.' That is, the authors stated the heat input was a constant value. So you're simply graphing the temperature of the water over time.
    You're welcome.
    Significantly, this demo nicely illustrates why the "Blue Ocean Event"-- when most Arctic ice has melted-- will be game over for most life on earth. Humans included.
    You're not welcome.

  • @avantimenon9290
    @avantimenon9290 8 років тому +10

    boiling and evaporating are very different.

    • @farmerguy7406
      @farmerguy7406 8 років тому

      Boiling is just evaporation only faster since it's provided with heat and happens only at 100°C and produces bubbles.

    • @duplicaatededits
      @duplicaatededits 8 років тому +5

      actually, farmerguy, boiling has a specific temperature at where the state change happens, whereas evaporation can happen at a large range of temperatures

    • @mrgauravsher
      @mrgauravsher 4 роки тому

      @@duplicaatededits ACKCHYULLYYYYYY moment

  • @املالغد-ي3ف
    @املالغد-ي3ف 6 років тому

    state any suggestions to improve the experiment measurement of latent heat of evaporation

  • @jaredgeorge3702
    @jaredgeorge3702 10 років тому

    What is the state of the substance between the Liquid Melting.

  • @danaosama4247
    @danaosama4247 9 років тому

    Liquid gains heat in order to change to gas, which means that Q is positive (in Q=mL)
    What is the sign of Q when gas changes back to liquid? Is it negative since heat is lost?

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому

      Dana Mo. Yup.

    • @danaosama4247
      @danaosama4247 9 років тому

      Doc Schuster I forgot to ask that, but where does the negative sign come from if latent heat and mass are both positive?
      Thanks :)

  • @ianjaydelosangeles3173
    @ianjaydelosangeles3173 9 років тому +10

    i should be paying u than my physics instructor...

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому +13

      Ian Delos Angeles Feel free, man! Mo' money, mo videos is what we say in these streets.

  • @karamatmohammad5985
    @karamatmohammad5985 8 років тому

    fusion and melting is the same. and also evaporation is not the same is boiling. boiling occurs in the temperature where the vapor pressure is equal to external pressure (stove), and once the external pressure overcomes the vapor pressure the molecules of water will evaporate.

  • @benturner8181
    @benturner8181 7 років тому

    How do you guys know how long to draw the horizontal lines. I dont get it someone please i'm begging you if you are readig this please help me.

  • @tacomaliciouso
    @tacomaliciouso 10 років тому

    can i solve for heat required without mass given?

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  11 років тому

    Slick. I think we'd get along.

  • @hamzakashif4449
    @hamzakashif4449 6 років тому

    hey doc you are amazing. thousands likes and subscribes may you get. will help you achieve that.

  • @Mohamed-Madbouly
    @Mohamed-Madbouly 9 років тому

    what happens when i starts from the zero degree?.........does the graph also starts horizontally for a while like this...........and thanks in advance.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому +1

      Mohamed Madbouly If you start at zero celsius, you have either hot ice, cold water, or some ice water. The fraction that is ice will determine how long it spends at 0 C before beginning to warm (all ice needs to melt first).

    • @Mohamed-Madbouly
      @Mohamed-Madbouly 9 років тому

      Doc Schuster.i am a university student studying engineering and you explained this part better than my doctor did...really you are a great man.....many thanks for these videos...and merry Christmas

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому

      Thank you!

    • @chazclapsaddle2529
      @chazclapsaddle2529 9 років тому

      Mohamed Madbouly Why are you taking physics lessons from your doctor? He specializes in medicine.

    • @Mohamed-Madbouly
      @Mohamed-Madbouly 9 років тому

      Chaz Clapsaddle you seem small minded to understand.

  • @ApurvPriyanshLuka
    @ApurvPriyanshLuka 7 років тому

    What was P=I^2R?

  • @misssweethearted
    @misssweethearted 10 років тому +2

    Amazing

  • @siyabongachavangwane1504
    @siyabongachavangwane1504 6 років тому

    wow you teach awesome I love it, i'm definately subscribing

  • @jsofdockr4572
    @jsofdockr4572 10 років тому

    Isn't evaporation different from boiling?

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  10 років тому

      Tell me how.

    • @NightRatez
      @NightRatez 10 років тому +1

      Doc Schuster I think evaporation happens all the time, while boiling only happens when the fluid is at its boiling point. But i guess in this case you can use evaporation as well... anyway thanks for the informative vid.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  10 років тому +1

      Ooh. I like that. Wikipedia says "vaporization" is the umbrella term and evaporation and boiling are the two types. THANK YOU for the clarification.

  • @dr_ltorres8289
    @dr_ltorres8289 Рік тому

    That General Patton joked deserved better :)

  • @ellybailey6673
    @ellybailey6673 3 роки тому

    This video was really helpful :)

  • @anotherdoseyt
    @anotherdoseyt 7 років тому +1

    😂I can't tell if the other guy is being serious of is just there for comedic relief

    • @captainlevi2457
      @captainlevi2457 7 років тому +1

      his purpose in the video remains questionable.

  • @de-soldierman
    @de-soldierman 4 роки тому

    Nice vid

  • @sshirish9167
    @sshirish9167 6 років тому +1

    That guy in the background :-P :-D!!!!!

  • @meh_life3239
    @meh_life3239 7 років тому

    You make me less terrified about my test

  • @GlitteredUp4Easter
    @GlitteredUp4Easter 6 днів тому

    Dang I expected better from this guy, evaporating and vaporizing are similar, but not interchangeable terms.

  • @evanevans3405
    @evanevans3405 4 роки тому

    Damn this thing 8 years old and I got the balls to say that your "red" marker is orange

  • @JuiceBoxBoiii
    @JuiceBoxBoiii 8 років тому +2

    Hi really loved your video and the guy in the background.. his voice is so cute xD

  • @roxannejiang2136
    @roxannejiang2136 8 років тому +2

    solve that sucker

  • @janakprakash3586
    @janakprakash3586 11 років тому

    is it just me or does he sound a little like barney stinson ???? anyway i love your vids

  • @True-v3u
    @True-v3u 6 років тому

    Thnks

  • @lettersfromanihilist9092
    @lettersfromanihilist9092 3 роки тому

    their dynamic tho

  • @Th3End0fUs
    @Th3End0fUs 11 років тому

    Thx!!!

  • @proenrichment
    @proenrichment 5 років тому

    Gd explanatiom

  • @John-ti8bf
    @John-ti8bf 7 років тому +1

    where does your friend buy his weed from?

  • @gabrielroa3037
    @gabrielroa3037 5 років тому

    "oh u wanna , yeaah"

    • @noel6187
      @noel6187 4 роки тому

      “do u have it, yeah”

  • @Xepouniq
    @Xepouniq 10 років тому +1

    v help[ful

  • @l.marcadella4099
    @l.marcadella4099 5 років тому

    Like 10 apples man!!!!

  • @Cube_Box
    @Cube_Box 4 роки тому

    2020, anyone?

  • @12345678941020
    @12345678941020 9 років тому

    It's so annoying when they use Celsius instead of Fahrenheit

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому +13

      will rubio What is actually annoying is that you (and I) were raised in a backward culture that refuses to use a system that is objectively superior and in use in literally every other country in the world. I'm so sorry.

    • @12345678941020
      @12345678941020 9 років тому

      I love the American way though lol

    • @reversal_of_expectation1457
      @reversal_of_expectation1457 8 років тому

      +houston we have a problem i hate the american system. i hope it will disappear. :-)

  • @pomas6497
    @pomas6497 8 років тому

    like 10

  • @mrbitu4713
    @mrbitu4713 5 років тому

    What's are you explaining lol your background 😂

  • @mizamazor
    @mizamazor 11 років тому

    general Patton LOL

  • @sankaraseker6604
    @sankaraseker6604 8 років тому

    hiii

  • @Codesage-r1k
    @Codesage-r1k 6 місяців тому

    I am watching this video in 2024

  • @mohammedismail4210
    @mohammedismail4210 4 роки тому

    Thanks so much
    Ben Shapiro

  • @Sl4yerkid
    @Sl4yerkid 7 років тому

    あなたはいい先生じゃないですが、おもしろかった。

  • @slycooper8636
    @slycooper8636 11 років тому

    Lowes Is BETTER!

  • @user-Kassie
    @user-Kassie 10 років тому +138

    lol the guy in the background

  • @the_3arab629
    @the_3arab629 9 років тому +106

    Hi,
    i would just like to tell you that you made a mistake when you labeled boiling and evaporation at the same place. its quite a common error, but boiling and evaporation are actually two different things. Evaporation takes place at a very large range of temperature compared to boiling that only takes place when the temperature reaches the boiling point. For example if it were to rain at about 6pm, in countries like where i am (Kenya) where the temperature is not too low (around 20C at night), then in the morning we would find the water to have vaporized, how if it wasn't 100c? this happens because the water molecules at the surface tend to jump out of the liquid surface due to the kinetic energy. Here we can say: Evaporation only takes place at the surface of the liquid at a large temperature range where as boiling takes place at any area of the liquid (reason for bubbles) and at only a certain temperature (boiling point) depending on the liquid. Therefore during evaporation the temperature of the liquid can change but not in boiling.

    • @DocSchuster
      @DocSchuster  9 років тому +28

      The_3arab That's awesome! Very good point!

    • @nomsy9279
      @nomsy9279 8 років тому +6

      +The_3arab ;smart kid :)
      you're good

    • @cijnslv
      @cijnslv 8 років тому +4

      Calm down lol.He is a teacher.I guess he'll understand if u just tell him his mistake no need 4 explaining

    • @nomsy9279
      @nomsy9279 8 років тому +14

      +Abdullah Al-Amri
      He has to know the point where the mistake is made.😊

    • @fish3977
      @fish3977 7 років тому +29

      also helps idiots like us.

  • @justdroppedin2997
    @justdroppedin2997 8 років тому +35

    "like 10?" LOL

  • @JohnDoe-gb6co
    @JohnDoe-gb6co 3 роки тому +17

    i love the way this guy teaches. he really holds my attention. thanks Doc!

  • @ianjaydelosangeles3173
    @ianjaydelosangeles3173 9 років тому +27

    Youre informative and entertaininng at da same tym

    • @saimeghana2261
      @saimeghana2261 9 років тому +4

      I love the entertaining part!! I'd be watching this guy's videos while my mom's like: "Are you studying or watching comedy?" haha

  • @jontyroy1723
    @jontyroy1723 7 років тому +19

    I hope you're a teacher outside UA-cam as well. :)

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  11 років тому +6

    I prefer to call it liquifying, because melting sometimes makes my students think of water. But I agree with you in principle.

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  11 років тому +3

    My sloppy handwriting's secret code for the word: Liquifyin' or "turnin' into a liquid"

  • @DocSchuster
    @DocSchuster  11 років тому +1

    Heat is thermal energy. I am adding heat but not changing the temperature. Distinguishing heat from temperature is sometimes a tricky process, but it's SO important to understand.

  • @aphondex
    @aphondex 2 роки тому +1

    Lmao the guy that said you'd need 10 apples to melt 1 kg of ice was totally clueless.

  • @90798
    @90798 9 років тому +4

    like for the teacher :p

  • @divyanshiupadhyay513
    @divyanshiupadhyay513 3 роки тому +1

    If only my teacher was like this...

  • @seifdeiab
    @seifdeiab 8 років тому +2

    +Doc Schuster what does the area under the ladder shape like line represent?

  • @gabor6259
    @gabor6259 5 років тому +2

    You misspelled liquefyin'.

  • @xeon9299
    @xeon9299 10 років тому +3

    subscribed!

  • @hemagaharwar7127
    @hemagaharwar7127 4 роки тому +1

    Very good

  • @JessieBmarie
    @JessieBmarie 11 років тому +1

    hell yes! I agree and was just watching HIMYM which makes this so much better!

  • @Shayde7098
    @Shayde7098 11 років тому +1

    Thanks for this, very informative. Helped me study for my oceanography midterm

  • @didnot2000
    @didnot2000 11 років тому +1

    i like how the guy played the stupid part, it made me laugh
    Shut up!

  • @vickramshabaz2978
    @vickramshabaz2978 2 роки тому

    bro i love thissss....really gets my attention finally a teache who teaches in english......🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣other be teaching in chinese i guess.....

  • @gregreeve3363
    @gregreeve3363 5 років тому

    Labeling the RHS as steam is wrong. Steam is still visible water. Should have been labelled as water vapour, which cannot be seen, but which surrounds us in various quantities in every day life. Other than that, I like it.

  • @kevinmarquez117
    @kevinmarquez117 9 років тому +1

    Very helpful and entertaining, thank you.

  • @RonnyNgan
    @RonnyNgan 10 років тому +1

    I have a question. Steam at 100 degree C is injected into a melting ice block of the same mass. What is the final temperature of the mixture?

  • @shaileshkumarshetty4401
    @shaileshkumarshetty4401 6 років тому

    wtf another boy
    ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

  • @sheejamohan9145
    @sheejamohan9145 7 років тому +1

    Waaaw got many things. Thanks for the vedio

  • @zackwalker2642
    @zackwalker2642 Рік тому

    I think you got the HEAT line and the TIME line mixed up.

  • @kurdistanlover9737
    @kurdistanlover9737 10 років тому +1

    It helped alot thank u

  • @freyahWF
    @freyahWF 4 роки тому

    out of all the educational channels of watched, this is the first one I've subscribed to. As my former history teacher says, Good Stuff!

  • @CTMeRJ
    @CTMeRJ 11 років тому

    Actually, I believe you are heating the ice by adding thermal energy. You're not adding heat.

  • @cutegurl567
    @cutegurl567 5 років тому

    he sounds like John Stamos

  • @zionpope9491
    @zionpope9491 4 місяці тому

    Very helpful !

  • @Phytoblaster
    @Phytoblaster 7 років тому

    Although we see massive ice melt in the arctic and antarctic as icebergs the size of Delaware are breaking off the continental ice sheet, the latent heat of fusion is the reason that we don't see dramatic changes in global temperature. The ice can only absorb so much heat energy. As it melts, the temperature buffering capacity of the global ice sheets decreases, leading to exponential rise in the change in global temperature. Yes, global mean temperature is rising, faster and faster. Thermodynamics never lie.

  • @shubhamshail3506
    @shubhamshail3506 4 роки тому

    You have written "fusion" and "solidification" in the same direction. But actually they both are opposite of each other . Fusion is change of solid into liquid however solidification is the change of liquid into solid.

  • @saadullahtauqeer3625
    @saadullahtauqeer3625 2 роки тому

    You teach good

  • @cheskajoyce541
    @cheskajoyce541 5 років тому

    I like this guy

  • @amasaz0
    @amasaz0 11 років тому

    6:20 Why don't you just say 335000 apple/kg? *You don't need to tell me how genuis I am, I already know :D

  • @MrInfodump
    @MrInfodump Рік тому

    thank you for this! it’s really helpful to visualize this