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It would depend on the temperature of the water, or average kinetic energy. (KE) However, what you may be looking for is how much heat is needed to raise the KE, or temperature, of water. 4.184 kilojoules per gram is the heat required to raise the temperature of water 1 degree Celsius.
None. Now if you mean potential kilojoules if fusion happens, or the kilojoules at a certain temperature, that is something else entirely.
q(Joules) = mass * specific heat * change in temperature q = 32.0 grams H2O * 4.180 J/gC *(54.0 C - 12.0 C) = 5617.92 Joules this is, of course 5.62 kilojoules
That's going to depend on what temperature the water starts from.
It has been found that 4.2 kilojoules of energy raises the temperature of 1000g of water by 1•c.
It is harder to raise the temperature of water than it is to raise the temperature of a rock. It takes 1 calorie of energy to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree C, whereas it only takes 0.02 calorie to heat a gram of rock to that temperature.
32200
Water is something that will be affected if you raise the temperature. When cooking, you may need to raise the temperature of water to a boil, in order to cook food.
It is used to raise the temperature of the water.
Depends on how high you want to raise the gram of water ;).
90.4
It depends on what temperature is is at and how much water there is.