https://byjus.com/question-answer/a-hea ... ant-fixed/Question
A heat engine is supplied with 250 kJ/s of heat at a constant fixed temperature of
227°C; the heat is rejected at 27°C, the cycle is reversible, then what amount of heat is rejected?
Solution
The correct option is C 150kJ/s
...
https://byjus.com/question-answer/a-car ... -at-375-k/Question
A Carnot engine operates with a source at
500K and sink at 375K. If the engine consumes 600kcal of heat in one cycle, the heat rejected to the sink per cycle is
Solution
The correct option is B 450kcal
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https://www.chegg.com/homework-help/que ... q119365781advanced physics
questions and answers
example 6.11.
a carnot's engine is operated between two reservoirs at temperatures of 450 k and 350 k. if the engine receives 1000 calories of heat from the source in each cycle, calculate the amount of heat rejected to the sink in each cycle. ...
There are, of course many more.
A running engine is obviously taking in some heat to operate.
At a typical 10 or 20% efficiency five or ten times more heat than the engine needs to operate must be "rejected'.
Again, your criticisms above apper disingenuous.
Obviously the heat "rejected" by a running engine supplied with enough heat to operate should at least be measurable, should never be zero, and the temperature of the sink should should certainly not be at or below ambient if the Carnot Limit equation were valid.
Again, if you or anyone thinks my results are flawed, anyone can do their own experiments. If they get different results, wonderful.
I see no point in drawing this out. If you have something to prove, do your own experiments.
Mine are mostly all recorded on video and described in detail easy and relatively inexpensive experiments to replicate.
I have nothing to prove. I just reported my results as objectively as possible, without much personal bias or interpretation on my part. By Video.
Anyone can watch the videos and draw their own conclusions or repeat the experiments and see what results they get themselves.