docx, 21.83 KB
docx, 21.83 KB
Every time I do this I am amazed at how close we get to 6000K. Of course, the nature of Stefan's Law helps and all the errors and assumptions seem to cancel each other out. Admittedly, I have always done this experiment in either Thailand or Vietnam where it is rather sunny, but it might work well on a summer&'s day in UK. Today, we put a cylindrical (8.3cm high x 4.4cm diameter) 1kg copper calorimetry block out in the sun for 6 minutes and it&';s temperature rose from 34 to 39 C. Plug these numbers into the attached worksheet and we get a surface temp of 5900K
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Reviews

5

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jdwooldridge17

4 years ago
5

mingram36

6 years ago
5

Just tried this in Qatar as an introduction lesson for my inherited Year 13 class as a fun ice-breaker lesson. We got around 5600K and the pupils really enjoyed to lesson, it never worked for me in the UK but I will most definitely use this again in the sunny climate of Qatar. Thanks for sharing!

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