Systems vs processes – is “heating and expanding of a gas” a thermodynamic system? Consider the statement: “The heating and expanding of a gas is called a thermodynamic system.” Is this statement correct?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: No

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Thermodynamics distinguishes clearly between a system (the material or region under study) and a process (the transformation of the system from one state to another). This question tests that distinction by presenting a common misconception in wording.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • A thermodynamic system is a specified quantity of matter or a region in space chosen for analysis.
  • A process describes how the system changes state (e.g., heating, expansion, compression).
  • Boundaries may be fixed or movable and may permit heat/work transfer.


Concept / Approach:

“Heating and expanding” describes actions or path characteristics, i.e., a process. The system would be “the gas within the cylinder” or “the control mass within the control volume.” Therefore, the statement mislabels a process as a system and is incorrect. Proper phrasing: “The gas in the cylinder is the thermodynamic system; it undergoes a heating and expansion process.”


Step-by-Step Solution:

Define system: specified matter or region (control mass or control volume).Define process: change of state (e.g., heating, expansion) experienced by the system.Identify that the statement uses process wording where system definition is required.Conclude the statement is incorrect.


Verification / Alternative check:

In PV diagrams, the path represents the process; the state point represents system state. Textbook examples consistently separate the object of study (system) from how it changes (process).


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

Any “Yes” variants confuse process with system; ideal-gas or isothermal qualifiers do not correct the category error.


Common Pitfalls:

Describing a device (e.g., “a turbine”) as a process; devices contain systems that undergo processes, but the categories must be kept distinct.


Final Answer:

No

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