Unknown008
Mar 1, 2011, 09:22 AM
I'm having a hard time guessing what curl h and curl p as well as cp mean... :(
jcaron2
Mar 1, 2011, 11:09 AM
Does h mean enthalpy, p mean pressure, T, mean temperature, and cp mean specific heat at constant pressure? Also, is there a difference between p and P?
Is this what you're saying?
\left (\frac{\bigtriangledown \times h}{\bigtriangledown \times p} \right )_T=C_p\left (\frac{\bigtriangledown \times T}{\bigtriangledown \times P} \right )_h
If so, I don't think that makes any sense because the curl operation results in a vector. Vector division, as such, is not defined.
jcaron2
Mar 1, 2011, 12:57 PM
By the way, are you sure you don't mean the partial derivative, rather than curl?
\left ( \frac{\partial h}{\partial P} \right )_T=c_p\left ( \frac{\partial T}{\partial P} \right )_h
This can be shown with a few of Bridgman's equations (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridgman's_thermodynamic_equations):
\left ({\partial P} \right )_T=-1
\left ({\partial P} \right )_H=-C_p
\left ({\partial H} \right )_T=-\left ({\partial T} \right )_H