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The specific heat of water is 4.179 Joules per gram per degree Centigrade. The density of water is 1 gram per cubic centimeter, so one liter is 1000 grams. This means it takes 4179 Joules to raise one liter one degree Centigrade.
4186 Joules per liter per deg C. Not clear if we are raising the temperature BY 135 deg or TO 135 deg. So the answer is 4186 x 100 x rise in temperature. (Joules).
195 joule..
It is able to heat the water quickly so that it is ready on demand. The copper plate underneath helps to heat up this water.
More specific heat means you need more heat energy to, for example, raise one kilogram of a substance by one degree centigrade.
degrees and centigrade
It is a temperature of heat at 105 degrees Centigrade or Celsius
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat
No. Those are units of temperature. Heat is measured in units of energy, such as the joule.
The specific heat of water is 4.179 Joules per gram per degree Centigrade. The density of water is 1 gram per cubic centimeter, so one liter is 1000 grams. This means it takes 4179 Joules to raise one liter one degree Centigrade.
Most geysers water temperatures are around 200 degrees f. Known geysers differ in their temperatures and are between 174 and 205 degrees. Close enough?
It depends on the element size that heats the water. The average 150L geyser uses a 3kW element, which will take about 2.5h to heat the water from cold to 70'C. If you "empty" the geyser twice daily, which is an unlikely maximum, it'll use 15 kWh of electricity.
Temperature is an important factor, but temperature alone cannot predict that ice will melt. Adding the heat of fusion to ice at zero degrees centigrade will cause it to melt without elevating its temperature, and removing the heat of fusion from water at zero degrees centigrade will cause it to freeze without lowering its temperature.
from the sides
The heat from a geyser came effect how high the geyser europes and for how long because it gives the geyser more power.
1.25
Centigrade