Question
Question: A recruit can join the semi-secret “300 F” club at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station only when t...
A recruit can join the semi-secret “300 F” club at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station only when the outside temperature is below −700C. On such a day, the recruit first basks in a hot sauna and then runs outside wearing only shoes. (This is against the constant danger of the cold). Assuming that upon stepping out of the sauna, the recruit’s skin temperature is 1020F and the walls, ceiling and the floor of the sauna room have the temperature of 300C. Estimate the recruit’s surface area and take the skin emissivity to be 0.80. What is the approximate net rate of power at which the recruit loses energy via thermal radiation exchanges with the room? Next, assume that when outdoors, half the recruit’s surface area exchanges thermal radiation with the sky at a temperature of −250C and the other half exchanges thermal radiation with the snow and ground at a temperature of −800C. What is the approximate net rate at which the recruit loses energy via thermal radiation exchanges?
Solution
We need to relate the given temperatures of the recruit’s body, the sauna room, the outside sky and the snow to find the thermal radiation exchange rates. We need to use Stefan-Boltzmann's law to find the solution for this problem.
Complete answer:
We know from Stefan-Boltzmann's law of thermal radiation that the rate of emission of thermal radiation is proportional to the area of the radiating surface, the fourth power of the temperature difference between the body and the surrounding and the emissivity of the body. This can be mathematically given as –
P=eσA(T4−TS4)
Where, P is the thermal radiation rate,
e is the emissivity of the object,
σ is the Stefan’s constant,
T is the temperature of the object and
TS is the temperature of the surrounding.
Now, let us consider the situation given to us. We have men being recruited to the club. We can estimate the height of the man to be almost 2 meters. We can consider his body as a cylinder (body) of height 1.8 m and radius 0.15 m and a sphere (head) of radius 0.10 m. We can find the surface area of his entire body including head as –