Home
Class 11
PHYSICS
A vessel containing 100 g ice at 0^(@)C ...

A vessel containing 100 g ice at `0^(@)C` is suspended in a room where temperature is `35^(@)C`. It was found that the entire ice melted in 10 hour. Now the same vessel containing 100 g of water at `0^(@)C` is suspended in the same room. How much time will it take for the temperature of water to rise to `0.5^(@)C`. Neglect the heat capacity of the vessel. Specific heat of water and specific latent heat of fusion of ice are `1 cal g^(-1) .^(@)C^(-1)` and `80 cal g^(-1)` respectively.

Promotional Banner

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

A piece of ice at 0^@C is added to a vessel containing water at 0^@C , then

A piece of ice of mass 100 g and at temperature 0^@ C is put in 200 g of water of 25^@ C . How much ice will melt as the temperature of the water reaches 0^@ C ? (specific heat capacity of water =4200 J kg^(-1) K^(-1) and latent heat of fusion of ice = 3.4 xx 10^(5) J Kg^(-1) ).

A piece of ice of mass 100 g and at temperature 0^@ C is put in 200 g of water of 25^@ C . How much ice will melt as the temperature of the water reaches 0^@ C ? (specific heat capacity of water =4200 J kg^(-1) K^(-1) and latent heat of fusion of ice = 3.4 xx 10^(5) J Kg^(-1) ).

How much heat energy is released when 5.0 g of water at 20^@ C changes into ice at 0^@ C ? Take specific heat capacity of water = 4.2 J g^(-1) K^(-1) , specific latent heat of fusion of ice = 336 J g^(-1) .

A mass m of steam at 100^(@)C is to passed into a vessel containing 10g of ice and 100g of water at 0^(@)C so that all the ice is melted and the temperature is raised to 5^(@)C neglecting heat absorbed by the vessel, we get

A piece of ice of mass of 100g and at temperature 0^(@)C is put in 200g of water of 25^(@)C .How much ice will melt as the temperature of the water reaches 0^(@)C ? The specific heat capacity of water = 4200 J kg ^(-1)K^(-1) and the specific latent heat of ice = 3.4 xx 10^(5)J kg^(-1)

A piece of ice at 0^@C is put into a vessel containing water at 0^@C . The ice will