I had this unit conversions test today in Thermofluids...I messed ONE problem up, can anyone on here solve it?
The kinetic energy per unit mass is given by the formula ke=(V^2)/2. If the velocity is 20 m/sec, write the kinetic energy in units of KJ/kg.
I was so damn close but got it wrong and didn't pass the test so I have to take it again every week until I pass. First problem I nailed, third problem I blew through...just this problem I couldn't figure out. He gives us 10 min for all three. You either pass or you fail, there's no partial credit, have to get all three which SUCKS!
For kicks here's the other two
1. In one application the power output of a turbine is given by W(dot) = m(dot)delta(h). If m(dot)= 5lbm/sec and delta(h)=200 Btu/lbm, determine the turbine power in units of Horsepower. (1HP=550 ft-lbf/sec) and (778ft-lbf=1Btu)
3. The kinetic energy per unit mass is given by the formula ke=(V^2)/2. If the velocity is 20ft/sec, write the kinetic energy in units of ft-lbf/lbm
use GC=32.2 ft-lbm/lbf-sec^2
lbm is pound mass and english unit of measurement
lbf is pound force, also an english unit
as well as Btu....British Thermal Unit
The kinetic energy per unit mass is given by the formula ke=(V^2)/2. If the velocity is 20 m/sec, write the kinetic energy in units of KJ/kg.
I was so damn close but got it wrong and didn't pass the test so I have to take it again every week until I pass. First problem I nailed, third problem I blew through...just this problem I couldn't figure out. He gives us 10 min for all three. You either pass or you fail, there's no partial credit, have to get all three which SUCKS!
For kicks here's the other two
1. In one application the power output of a turbine is given by W(dot) = m(dot)delta(h). If m(dot)= 5lbm/sec and delta(h)=200 Btu/lbm, determine the turbine power in units of Horsepower. (1HP=550 ft-lbf/sec) and (778ft-lbf=1Btu)
3. The kinetic energy per unit mass is given by the formula ke=(V^2)/2. If the velocity is 20ft/sec, write the kinetic energy in units of ft-lbf/lbm
use GC=32.2 ft-lbm/lbf-sec^2
lbm is pound mass and english unit of measurement
lbf is pound force, also an english unit
as well as Btu....British Thermal Unit
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