Ice. For 6 gr of water and 8 deg C you need 6 x 8 = 48 calories For 5 gr of ice and 20 deg C you need at least 100 ( 5 x 20) if we neglect small difference in the specific heat of ice versus water. If the ice melts then you need additional thermal energy to break the hydrogen bonds in ice (melting thermal energy) so it is even more.
i would say that the 150 gram bar because the thermal energy will be able to travel around the bar quicker
There are 28 grams in 1 ounce.
25000
4.18J/g degrees C * 7.40 g *55 degrees celcius = 1702.J energy per gram actual actual temp = energy required of water per degree grams of temperature of H20
1.3 kg water = 1300 grams. q(Joules-heat energy) = mass * specific heat * change in temperature q = (1300 g)(4.180 J/gC)(100 C - 20 C) = 4.3 X 105 Joules of heat energy ========================
(75'C)x(1g) < (75'C)x(100g) .'. The second option has more thermal energy.
The density of sulfur in grams/cm3 is 2.070. (not at twenty five degrees Celsius)
Thermal energy is a product of two variables; the temperature, and the mass. If two objects having the same mass were heated to the same temperature, they would have the same thermal energy. If an object weighing ten grams was heated to 1000º C, it would have less thermal energy than an object weighing 2 tons, heated to 100º C. To demonstrate this, imagine the amounts of ice each of the above objects could melt.
i would say that the 150 gram bar because the thermal energy will be able to travel around the bar quicker
If coffee and milk have the same thermal coefficient then: (15*22 + 185*86)/200 = 81 (81,2 rounded off due to significant digits)
That is approximately 566.991 grams
Twenty six grams (26g) is the equivalent of 0.917123 ounces.
Maybe about Twenty-Eight grams
25 grams is 0.025 kilograms.
There are twenty eight (28) grams in an ounce.
What is the density of water at 37 degrees Celsius?
your buut