Being exhausted from work does not help in trying to work problems at night.
Anyway, as I have not worked to many HT and fluids problems lately they are
taking longer than expected. Problem number 37 is one of those problems. I
worked the first part fine except that they got 19.4 degrees C I got 19.4
degrees K which of course changed my final answer. How do you get C from an
equation that only has K in it?? Note: There is no errata on print #3 which is
what I have.
T= (73 W/M) / 2 x pie x (80 W/M^2-K) x (.015m/2)
Change in T = 19.4 C??
Anyway, as I have not worked to many HT and fluids problems lately they are
taking longer than expected. Problem number 37 is one of those problems. I
worked the first part fine except that they got 19.4 degrees C I got 19.4
degrees K which of course changed my final answer. How do you get C from an
equation that only has K in it?? Note: There is no errata on print #3 which is
what I have.
T= (73 W/M) / 2 x pie x (80 W/M^2-K) x (.015m/2)
Change in T = 19.4 C??