Home
Class 11
PHYSICS
Statement I : The specific heat of a gas...

Statement I : The specific heat of a gas in an adiabatic process is zero but it is infinite in an isothermal process.
Statement II : Molar specific heat of a gas is directly proportional to heat exchanged with the system and inversely proportional to change in temperature.

A

Statement I is true, statement II is true, statement II is a correct explanation for statement I.

B

Statement I is true, statement II is true, statement II is not a correct explanation for statement I.

C

Statement I is true, statement II is false

D

Statement I is false, statement II is true.

Text Solution

Verified by Experts

The correct Answer is:
A
Promotional Banner

Topper's Solved these Questions

  • FIRST AND SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise Entrance Corner - Multiple correct answer type|1 Videos
  • FIRST AND SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise Entrance Corner - Integer answer type|5 Videos
  • FIRST AND SECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise Exercise - Hots Numerical Problems (Marks 3/4/5)|28 Videos
  • EXPANSION OF SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise CBSE SCANNER|2 Videos
  • FRICTION

    CHHAYA PUBLICATION|Exercise CBSE SCANNER|7 Videos

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

How many types of molar specific heat of a gas are used in practice?

Explain the importance of the ratio of the two specific heats of a gas.

How many types of specific heat of a gas are used in practice?

Show that the specific heat of a gas at constant pressure is greater than that at constant volume.

Statement I : Refractive index of a medium is inversely proportional to temperature. Statement II : Refractive index is directly proportional to the density of the medium.

Find the ratio of two molar specific heats for a diatomic gas .

At constant volume, the pressure of a definite mass of gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature Is the statement true or false?