So when talking about the temperature of the descent engines exhaust, would it be reasonable to say the temperature of the exhaust on the surface is (assuming a 45 degree spread after nozzle exit) 896 K x (area of nozzle/area of impact)? Where impact area is (nozzle diameter/2 + distance between nozzle and ground)^2 x pi?
Around 1.7/4.5 x 896K = 338 K? Or 65 C?
Not exactly. The effect of volume on pressure is described by the following equation,
(P
2 / P
1) = (V
1 / V
2)
kCombining this with the equation in Reply #10 and we get the effect of volume on temperature,
T
2 / T
1 = (V
1 / V
2)
k – 1So in your example, where we have a 1.7 to 4.5 change in volume, the new temperature becomes,
T
2 = 896 x (1.7 / 4.5)
1.23 – 1 = 716 K
(ETA) Also note that the change in cross-sectional area doesn't necessarily equate to a proportional change in volume. Area and volume are proportional only if the velocity remains the same. As the gas cools its enthalpy (internal energy) decreases. That decrease in enthalpy is converted to kinetic energy, thus the velocity increases.