The Last Conformist said:The number of degrees of freedom would depend on the temperature ...
True, but I think we can generally assume that were gonna only see translational and rotational because that's what you see at room temperature.The Last Conformist said:The number of degrees of freedom would depend on the temperature ...
Perfection said:True, but I think we can generally assume that were gonna only see translational and rotational because that's what you see at room temperature.
In that case it would be 5. Two rotational axes, and three translational directions.
puglover said:Isn't this the second time you've asked for homework help?![]()
That's utter jerkness. The other options are probably 7 or 3. I'd just complain.Atlas14 said:I just tried 5, and the program said Incorrect answer. And now Im out of tries.But the rest of the problems depend on me finding that one out...
Perfection said:That's utter jerkness. The other options are probably 7 or 3. I'd just complain.
A teacher who wants his/her students to realize that learning is more than just rote stuff?The Last Conformist said:... but what silly sort of teacher gives homework about something you don't even know what it is? I'd go complain about that if I were you.
Atlas14 said:Supposedly 5 was the number of vibrational degrees of freedom since it is a linear molecule
The Last Conformist said:The number of degrees of freedom would depend on the temperature ...
MrCynical said:I really don't think that's right. For a linear molecule the number of vibrational modes is 3N - 5, where N is the number of atoms in the molecule. CO2 would therefore only have 4 vibrational degrees of freedom, not 5. CO2 would also have 2 rotational modes as it is linear, and 3 translational modes, for the total of 9.
So the answer's correct, but the explanation there is wrong.
I've only seen this from a chemical perspective, but why is temperature relevant? It would affect the partition functions, yes, but not the number of degrees of freedom.