Differential Heating of Materials
Lab Report in Geography
The heating of materials varies considerable depending on material composition and atmospheric conditions. A considerable amount of the sun's energy can be reflected back into the atmosphere, in a process called albedo (Lutgens & Tarbuck, 1998, p. 36). The average albedo rates for sand, mud, asphalt, and water are approximately 20-30%, 10%, 5-10%, and 3-80%, respectively, depending on the position of the sun relative to the surface of water (p. 40).
The process of heating materials will vary as well. For example, asphalt and dry sand would primarily use conduction for thermal transfer, while bodies of water or air would use convection (p. 30). On the other hand, thermal transfer for wet soil or mud has the added complexity of latent heating (p. 76). Latent heating or evaporation has a strong cooling effect on the liquid moisture remaining, a loss of 600 calories for every gram of water turned into vapor. Based on the above information, the materials that would heat the quickest when exposed to a heat source would be asphalt > sand > water > mud. This hypothesis assumes that the air is not saturated with water vapor.
Procedure
Containers filled with sand, water, asphalt, and wet garden soil (mud) were placed at the front fo the...
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