Those units are not at all comparable in ordinary settings. A joule is a unit of energy. A kilogram is a unit of mass. The only comparison that can be made is in the world of Einsteinian physics, where matter can be completely converted to energy via nuclear processes. The equation for the amount of energy released is of course the famous E = mc**2, where E is energy, m is mass, and c is the speed of light.
In SI, specific heat capacity is measured in joules per kilogram kelvin.
Q = mcΔT Q = (1000 g)(4.18 J/(g*K))(5 K) Q = 20900 J Q = 20.9 kJ
there are 1,000,000 milligrams in a kilogram
Voltage is electrical pressure and Joules is a power rating so other info is needed
First off you would need to know the energy value of the oil, that is the amount of energy released during the combustion of a specified amount of the oil, eg kj/mol. The energy value for paraffin is around 46Mj/kg. 46 megajoules per kilogram, or 46million joules. One tonne is one thousand kilograms, so one tonne of paraffin would contain 46 thousand megajoules, or 46 gigajoules (46Gj).
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onlneconversion.com should have what you need for any conversion.
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