perfect gas
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A theoretical gas model: A "perfect gas" is a hypothetical gas composed of molecules of negligible size (point particles) that exert no intermolecular forces. This means the molecules do not attract or repel each other, and collisions between them are perfectly elastic.
Usage
- The term "perfect gas" is used primarily in physics and thermodynamics to describe a simplified model of gas behavior. It is a foundational concept for deriving fundamental laws, such as the ideal gas law.
- Example: "In introductory physics, we often assume a gas behaves as a to simplify calculations of pressure and volume."
Advanced Usage
- Scientific Modeling: The "perfect gas" model is an approximation. Real gases behave like perfect gases under conditions of high temperature and low pressure, where intermolecular forces and molecular volume become insignificant.
- Example: "At high altitudes, where pressure is low, the atmosphere can be approximated as a perfect gas for certain engineering calculations."
- Theoretical Context: It is often used interchangeably with "ideal gas" in many scientific texts, though some disciplines make subtle distinctions between the terms.
Variants and Related Words
- Ideal Gas (n): This is the more common modern term for the same theoretical concept. The "ideal gas law" (PV = nRT) is derived from the properties of a perfect/ideal gas.
- Real Gas (n): A gas that does not perfectly obey the ideal gas law due to intermolecular forces and the finite size of molecules. This is the opposite of a perfect gas.
Synonyms
- Ideal gas: The most direct synonym in scientific terminology.
Notes on Meaning
- The "perfect gas" is a theoretical construct. No real gas is perfectly "perfect," but the model is extremely useful for understanding basic gas dynamics and thermodynamics.
- The key properties defining a perfect gas are:
- Molecules have zero volume (are point masses).
- No forces act between molecules except during instantaneous, perfectly elastic collisions.
- The internal energy of the gas depends only on its temperature.
Noun
- a hypothetical gas with molecules of negligible size that exert no intermolecular forces