roughly 25 calories, 1 calorie is roughly 4 joules.
100 calories= 0.4184 kilojoules.
1,000 calories = 4,186.8 joules.
418.7kJ
Approximately 100 calories.
1 calorie = 4.184 joules So, 200calories * (4.184joules/1calorie) = 200*4.184 joules= 836.8 joules Since the category of this question is nutrition, I will point out that "calories" on food are actually "Calories". Notice the capital "c". It makes a difference. "Big c" calories are actually calories * 1000! A 100 Calorie snack isn't 100*4.184 = 418.4 Joules, it is 100,000 *4.184 = 418,400 Joules!
100 - 200 a week
100 BTU = ~105,505.59 joules
Whether you put it in front of joule, or any other unit, in physics, "kilo" means 1000. In computer science, "kilo" is sometimes rounded to 1024 (as in "kilobyte"), but in physics, kilo always means 1000.
It depends on the amount of beans, the amount of toast, and whether you butter the toast.In a tin of Heinz Beans there are 328 calories and 2 slices of white bread toasted is about 120 calories so Beans on toast is about 448 calories.Hope this helped :)
I believe that the Scientist's calorie is an actual calorie; however, the dietitian's calorie is actually a Kilo-calorie. In other words, although a box of cereal may say 100 calories/serving...this is not accurate. It should read either 100 Kcal/serving, or 100,000 calories/ serving, but that would be a bit overwhelming. So, we've adopted a system of Kilo-calories that we inaccurately call 'calories'.
Approx 2940 Joules.
The needed heat is 47,65 Joules.
0.1 kg
45.45 kilos equals 100 lbs.
100 calories