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Heat Transfer Blackbody

🎓 Class 11 Physics CBSE Theory Ch 10 – Thermal Properties of Matter ⏱ ~14 min
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Heat Transfer Blackbody

10.10 Heat Transfer — Three Modes

Heat travels from a hotter to a cooler region by three distinct mechanisms:

  • Conduction — through a stationary medium (typical of solids).
  • Convection — through bulk motion of a fluid (liquids, gases).
  • Radiation — through electromagnetic waves; needs no medium at all.

10.10.1 Conduction

If you grip the cold end of an iron rod whose other end is in a flame, heat travels along the rod by molecular collisions and free-electron motion — no bulk flow of metal occurs. Consider a slab of cross-section \(A\), thickness \(L\), with steady-state temperatures \(T_C\) and \(T_D\) on its faces (\(T_C > T_D\)). The heat current (heat per unit time) is given by Fourier's law:

\[\boxed{\,H = \frac{Q}{t} = -kA\frac{dT}{dx}\,}\] The minus sign reminds us that heat flows from high to low temperature. \(k\) is the thermal conductivity of the material (SI unit: W m⁻¹ K⁻¹). For a slab of uniform area: \[H = \frac{kA(T_C - T_D)}{L}\]
T_C T_D (hot) (cold) L heat current H = kA(T_C − T_D)/L
Fig 10.8: Steady-state conduction. The heat current is set by k, A, the temperature difference and the length L.
Materialk (W m⁻¹ K⁻¹)Materialk (W m⁻¹ K⁻¹)
Silver406Brick0.6
Copper385Glass0.8
Aluminium205Water0.6
Iron80Wood0.04–0.12
Steel50Air (still)0.024

Note metals (with their free electrons) are 100–10000× better conductors than insulators (wood, air, wool). That's why we wear woollen clothes in winter — the trapped air pockets are excellent insulators.

10.10.2 Convection

In a fluid heated from below, the warmer (less dense) fluid rises and the cooler (denser) fluid sinks, setting up convection currents. This is natural convection. Forced convection uses a pump or fan to drive the fluid (e.g. car radiators, central heating).

heat source warm fluid rises cool fluid sinks
Fig 10.9: Natural-convection currents in a beaker of water heated from below.

Familiar examples of natural convection: sea & land breezes, monsoon trade winds, the cooling fins of an air-cooled motorcycle engine, the boiling of water in a kettle.

10.10.3 Radiation

Sunlight reaches Earth across 150 million kilometres of empty space — a region almost devoid of matter. Heat transfer through electromagnetic waves is called radiation. Every body at temperature \(T > 0\) K emits radiation; the dominant wavelength depends on its temperature.

Stefan-Boltzmann Law: The total power radiated per unit area by a body at absolute temperature \(T\) is: \[\boxed{\,\frac{P}{A} = \varepsilon\sigma T^4\,}\] where \(\sigma = 5.67\times 10^{-8}\) W m⁻²K⁻⁴ is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant and \(\varepsilon\) (0 ≤ ε ≤ 1) is the emissivity of the surface. A perfect emitter (\(\varepsilon = 1\)) is called a blackbody.

Because power scales as \(T^4\), doubling the absolute temperature increases radiated power by a factor of 16. This extreme sensitivity explains why a tungsten lamp filament at 2800 K is millions of times brighter than a metal at 300 K.

Net radiation between body and surroundings (Ts): \[H = \varepsilon\sigma A(T^4 - T_s^4)\] positive when body radiates faster than it absorbs.

10.10.4 Wien's Displacement Law

The wavelength at which a black body radiates most intensely satisfies:

\[\boxed{\,\lambda_{\max}\, T = b\,}\qquad b = 2.898\times 10^{-3}\text{ m·K}\]

So hotter objects glow at shorter wavelengths. The Sun (T ≈ 5800 K) peaks in the green visible (~500 nm); the human body (T ≈ 310 K) peaks in the far-infrared (~9 μm); a red-hot iron piece (T ≈ 800 K) peaks at ~3.6 μm.

λ (nm) I(λ) visible 5800 K (Sun) 4000 K 3000 K λ_max·T = b 0 500 2000
Fig 10.10: Black-body intensity curves at three temperatures. As T rises, the peak wavelength shifts to shorter values (Wien's law) and total area under the curve grows as T⁴ (Stefan).

10.11 Newton's Law of Cooling

For a body that is only slightly hotter than its surroundings (\(T - T_s\) small), the rate of heat loss is approximately proportional to the temperature excess:

\[\boxed{\,-\frac{dT}{dt} = k(T - T_s)\,}\] which integrates to: \(T(t) - T_s = (T_0 - T_s)e^{-kt}\). The cooling is exponential.
t T T_s (surroundings) T₀ T(t) = T_s + (T₀−T_s)e^(−kt)
Fig 10.11: Exponential approach of body temperature T(t) towards the ambient T_s, as predicted by Newton's law of cooling.

Worked Examples

Example 10.13: Conduction through a brick wall

An external brick wall of a house is 0.20 m thick and has area 18 m². Inside temperature 22 °C, outside 5 °C; thermal conductivity of brick = 0.6 W/m·K. Find the rate of heat loss through the wall.

\(H = \dfrac{kA(T_C - T_D)}{L} = \dfrac{0.6 \times 18 \times (22 - 5)}{0.20} = \dfrac{183.6}{0.20} = \boxed{918\text{ W}}\).
That's a continuous heat loss of nearly 1 kW — the reason houses are insulated with double-brick walls and cavity insulation.

Example 10.14: Stefan-Boltzmann power of the human body

Estimate the radiative power lost by an undressed human at body temperature 37 °C, surface area 1.7 m², emissivity 0.95, in a room at 25 °C.

T = 310 K, T_s = 298 K. Net radiation:
\(H = \varepsilon\sigma A(T^4 - T_s^4) = 0.95\times 5.67\times 10^{-8} \times 1.7\times (310^4 - 298^4)\)
\(310^4 = 9.235\times 10^9\), \(298^4 = 7.886\times 10^9\), difference \(= 1.349\times 10^9\).
\(H = 0.95\times 5.67\times 10^{-8}\times 1.7\times 1.349\times 10^9 = \boxed{123\text{ W}}\) — close to the average sedentary metabolic rate.

Example 10.15: Wien's law for the Sun

The peak wavelength in the spectrum of solar radiation is about 510 nm. Estimate the surface temperature of the Sun.

\(T = \dfrac{b}{\lambda_{\max}} = \dfrac{2.898\times 10^{-3}}{510\times 10^{-9}} = \boxed{5682\text{ K}}\) — about 5800 K, in agreement with photospheric measurements.

Example 10.16: Cooling time using Newton's law

A pot of soup at 80 °C cools to 70 °C in 4 min in a room at 20 °C. Estimate the time it takes to further cool from 70 °C to 60 °C.

Approximate Newton's law as \(\Delta T/\Delta t = k(T_\text{avg}-T_s)\).
First step: \(10/4 = k(75 - 20) \Rightarrow k = 2.5/55 = 0.0455\) K⁻¹·min⁻¹.
Second step: T_avg = 65 °C, ΔT = 10 K. \(\Delta t = \dfrac{10}{0.0455(65 - 20)} = \dfrac{10}{2.05} \approx \boxed{4.9\text{ min}}\).

Interactive: Blackbody Radiation Calculator L3 Apply

Adjust temperature, area and emissivity. Stefan power and Wien's λ_max update in real time.

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Activity — Black & White Tin Cans in the Sun L4 Analyse
Predict: You leave two identical tin cans of water in bright sunlight — one painted matt black, the other polished silver. Which heats up faster?
  1. Take two identical tin cans. Paint one with matt-black paint and polish the other to a mirror finish.
  2. Fill both with the same volume of water at room temperature.
  3. Place them side by side in direct sunlight.
  4. Record the temperature in each can every 5 min for half an hour.
Observation: The black-painted can heats up much faster.
Explanation: A matt-black surface has emissivity (and absorptivity) close to 1, while polished silver has ε ≈ 0.05. By Kirchhoff's law (good emitters are also good absorbers), the black can absorbs the Sun's radiation efficiently, raising the water temperature quickly. Solar water heaters use this principle by painting their absorbers matt-black.

Competency-Based Questions

A nichrome heating coil at the bottom of an electric kettle has surface temperature 800 K and area 0.0025 m² (assume blackbody, ε=1). The kettle holds 1.5 L of water at 25 °C. Atmospheric (room) temperature 300 K.

Q1. L1 Remember State Stefan-Boltzmann's law in equation form.

\(P/A = \varepsilon\sigma T^4\), where σ = 5.67 × 10⁻⁸ W m⁻² K⁻⁴.

Q2. L3 Apply Net power radiated by the coil to the surroundings?

\(P = \varepsilon\sigma A(T^4 - T_s^4) = 1\times 5.67\times 10^{-8}\times 0.0025\times (800^4 - 300^4)\)
= \(1.418\times 10^{-10}\times (4.096\times 10^{11} - 8.1\times 10^9) = \boxed{56.9\text{ W}}\).

Q3. L3 Apply Find the wavelength at which the coil emits most strongly.

\(\lambda_{\max} = b/T = 2.898\times 10^{-3}/800 = 3.62\times 10^{-6}\) m = 3.6 µm (mid-infrared, invisible to the eye though we feel it as heat).

Q4. L4 Analyse Convection inside the kettle moves much more heat than radiation. Why is the coil still red-hot?

The coil's surface is much hotter than its surroundings, and Stefan power scales as T⁴. Even though convection extracts much more total power, the surface itself can stay at high T as long as electrical input keeps replenishing it. The red glow shows that radiation is non-trivial — but most kettle heating is convective.

Q5. L5 Evaluate Why are thermos flasks (a) silvered, (b) double-walled with vacuum between, and (c) sealed with a cork?

(a) Silvering reduces ε ≈ 0 → minimises radiative loss; (b) vacuum between the walls eliminates conduction and convection; (c) cork is a poor conductor and seals the top, blocking convective loss through the opening. Together these reduce all three modes of heat transfer.

Assertion-Reason Questions

Assertion (A): Heat radiation can travel through a vacuum.

Reason (R): Heat radiation is an electromagnetic wave that does not require a material medium.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
  • C. A is true, but R is false.
  • D. A is false, but R is true.
Answer: A. Sunlight reaching Earth across the vacuum of space is the everyday demonstration.

Assertion (A): A blackbody at high temperature appears red, while at much higher temperature it appears white-hot.

Reason (R): By Wien's law, peak wavelength shifts to shorter values as T rises, so the colour shifts from red towards blue/white.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
  • C. A is true, but R is false.
  • D. A is false, but R is true.
Answer: A. Wien's law (λ_max·T = b) is the underlying principle behind colour temperature in lighting and astronomy.

Assertion (A): Newton's law of cooling fails for very hot bodies.

Reason (R): Newton's law assumes T − T_s is small, so radiation losses (∝ T⁴) cannot be linearised.

  • A. Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
  • B. Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
  • C. A is true, but R is false.
  • D. A is false, but R is true.
Answer: A. The Stefan T⁴ dependence reduces to (T-T_s) terms only when the temperature gap is small.

Did You Know?

Frequently Asked Questions - Heat Transfer Blackbody

What is the main concept covered in Heat Transfer Blackbody?
In NCERT Class 11 Physics Chapter 10 (Thermal Properties of Matter), "Heat Transfer Blackbody" covers core principles and equations needed for board exam success. The MyAiSchool lesson explains the topic with definitions, derivations, worked examples, and interactive simulations. Key formulas and dimensional analysis are included to build conceptual depth and problem-solving skills aligned with the CBSE 2025-26 syllabus.
How is Heat Transfer Blackbody useful in real-life applications?
Real-life applications of Heat Transfer Blackbody from NCERT Class 11 Physics Chapter 10 include engineering design, satellite mechanics, sports biomechanics, transportation safety, and electrical/electronic devices. The MyAiSchool lesson links every concept to a tangible example so students see physics as a problem-solving framework for the physical world, not as abstract formulas.
What are the key formulas in Heat Transfer Blackbody?
Key formulas in Heat Transfer Blackbody (NCERT Class 11 Physics Chapter 10 Thermal Properties of Matter) are derived step-by-step in the MyAiSchool lesson. Students should memorize the final formula AND understand its derivation for full board marks. Each formula is listed with its dimensional formula, SI unit, applicability range, and common pitfalls. The Summary section at the end of each part includes a quick-reference formula card.
How does this part connect to other parts of Chapter 10?
NCERT Class 11 Physics Chapter 10 (Thermal Properties of Matter) is structured so each part builds on the previous one. Heat Transfer Blackbody connects directly to neighbouring parts via shared definitions, units, and methodology. The MyAiSchool lesson cross-references related concepts with internal links so students can navigate the whole chapter as one connected story rather than disconnected fragments.
What types of CBSE board questions come from Heat Transfer Blackbody?
CBSE board questions from Heat Transfer Blackbody typically include: (1) 1-mark MCQs on definitions and formulas, (2) 2-mark short-answer derivations or applications, (3) 3-mark numerical problems with units, (4) 5-mark long-answer derivations followed by application. The MyAiSchool lesson tags each Competency-Based Question (CBQ) with Bloom level (L1-L6) so students know how to study for each weight.
How can students use the interactive simulation effectively?
The interactive simulation in the Heat Transfer Blackbody lesson allows students to adjust input parameters (sliders or selectors) and see physical quantities update in real time. To use it effectively: (1) try extreme values to understand limiting cases, (2) compare with the analytical formula, (3) check unit consistency, (4) test special configurations from worked examples. The simulation reinforces conceptual intuition that pure formula manipulation cannot.
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