Describing the invisible properties of gas Brian Bennett

Transcriber: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Every minute of every day,

you breathe without even thinking about it.

Your body does it on its own, from the day you’re born until the day you die.

You have muscles contract to bring oxygen, a gas,

into your lungs, which is then transferred by your bloodstream to every cell in your body.

Gases are strange.

We can’t see them, but we know they’re there because we can feel them.

What we experience as wind is really trillions and trillions of gas molecules slamming into your body.

And it feels good, right?

Science is based on observation.

Unfortunately, we cannot observe gases with our eyes – they’re too small.

We have to use our other senses to make observations and draw conclusions.

Observations are then compiled, and we create a model.

No, not that kind of model.

A model is a way scientists describe the properties of physical phenomena.

First, gases always move in a straight line.

We don’t really have anything to demonstrate this with because gravity always pulls objects down.

So imagine a bullet fired from a gun, and that bullet goes on at a constant speed in a perfectly straight line.

That would be like a gas molecule.

Second, gases are so small, they occupy no volume on their own.

As a group they do, blow up any balloon and you can see how that volume changes.

But single gases have no volume compared to other forms of matter.

Rather than calculating such a small amount of matter, we just call it zero for simplicity.

Third, if gas molecules collide, and they do – remember, these are assumptions –

their energy remains constant.

An easy way to demonstrate this is by dropping a soccer ball with a tennis ball balanced on top.

Because the soccer ball is bigger, it has more potential energy,

and the energy from the larger ball is transferred to the smaller tennis ball

and it flies away when that energy is transferred.

The total energy stays the same.

Gases work the same way.

If they collide, smaller particles will speed up, larger particles will slow down.

The total energy is constant.

Fourth, gases do not attract one another, and they don’t like to touch.

But remember rule three. In reality, they do collide.

Finally, gases have energy that is proportional to the temperature.

The higher the temperature, the higher the energy the gases have.

The crazy thing is that at the same temperature, all gases have the same energy.

It doesn’t depend on the type of gas, just the temperature that gas is at.

Keep in mind this is a model for the way gas particles behave, and based on our observations,

gases always move in straight lines.

They’re so small, that they’re not measurable on their own,

and they don’t interact with one another.

But if they do bump into one another, that energy is transferred from one particle to another,

and the total amount never changes.

Temperature has a major effect, and in fact,

all gases at the same temperature have the same average energy.

Whew! I need to go catch my breath.

抄写员:汤姆·卡特
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

每天的每一分钟,

你都在呼吸,甚至不去想它。

从你出生的那一天到你死去的那一天,你的身体都是自己做的。

您的肌肉会收缩以将氧气(一种气体)

带入肺部,然后通过血液将氧气转移到身体的每个细胞中。

气体很奇怪。

我们看不到它们,但我们知道它们就在那里,因为我们能感觉到它们。

我们所经历的风实际上是数以万亿计的气体分子撞击你的身体。

而且感觉很好,对吧?

科学以观察为基础。

不幸的是,我们无法用肉眼观察气体——它们太小了。

我们必须使用我们的其他感官进行观察并得出结论。

然后编译观察结果,我们创建一个模型。

不,不是那种模型。

模型是科学家描述物理现象特性的一种方式。

首先,气体总是直线运动。

我们真的没有任何东西可以证明这一点,因为重力总是把物体拉下来。

所以想象一下从枪里射出的子弹,子弹以恒定的速度沿着一条完美的直线前进。

那就像一个气体分子。

其次,气体非常小,它们本身不占体积。

作为一个小组,他们吹起任何气球,你就可以看到那个体积是如何变化的。

但与其他形式的物质相比,单一气体没有体积。

与其计算这么少量的物质,我们只是为了简单起见将其称为零。

第三,如果气体分子发生碰撞,它们确实发生了——记住,这些都是假设——

它们的能量保持不变。

证明这一点的一个简单方法是放下一个足球,上面有一个平衡的网球。

因为足球更大,它有更多

的势能,大球的能量转移到较小的网球

上,当能量转移时它飞走了。

总能量保持不变。

气体的工作方式相同。

如果它们发生碰撞,较小的粒子会加速,较大的粒子会减速。

总能量是恒定的。

第四,气体不相互吸引,不喜欢接触。

但请记住规则三。 实际上,它们确实发生了碰撞。

最后,气体具有与温度成正比的能量。

温度越高,气体的能量越高。

疯狂的是,在相同的温度下,所有气体都具有相同的能量。

它不取决于气体的类型,而取决于气体所处的温度。

请记住,这是气体粒子行为方式的模型,根据我们的观察,

气体总是直线运动。

它们是如此之小,以至于它们本身无法测量,

并且它们不会相互影响。

但是,如果它们确实相互碰撞,那么能量就会从一个粒子转移到另一个粒子,

并且总量永远不会改变。

温度有很大的影响,事实上,

相同温度下的所有气体具有相同的平均能量。

哇! 我需要去喘口气。