onlneconversion.com should have what you need for any conversion.
1
7
7
34
7
It takes 4186 joules to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of water by 1 degree Celsius. The mass does make a difference.
Joule/kilogram-kelvin The SI unit is joules / kelvin. This is valid for an object of any size, but if you want the typical specific heat for a certain type of material, you have to standardize it, resulting in either joules / (kelvin x kilogram) or joules / (kelvin x mole).
Energy is given in Joules with is a Newton meter. A Newton is a kilogram meter squared per second squared. A 10 kg child has 98.1 Newtons which equals 98.1 Joules.
Not many, if you could convert all the sugar into energy by E=mc². ≈9.0 × 10^16 joules per kilogram
56 kilo joules = 56,000 joules
1 joule = 1 newton-meter = 1 kilogram-meter2/second2
(4 x 5) kilogram-meters = 20 joules