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itz gold ..
13,455 J
yes. It takes energy to raise the temperature of the solid to the melting point.
The answer depends on the unidentified substance whose temperature is to be raised.
13,455 J
The specific heat for aluminum is 0.9 J/g/degree and you use the equation of q = mC∆T.q = (30.0 g)(0.9 J/g/deg)(50 degrees) = 1350 J 0r 1.35 kJ
Uhm i'm in 3rd 4th quarter grade
Starting from the same temperature and for the same amount of heat input, aluminum would wind up with a higher temperature than water because water has a higher heat capacity (it takes more energy to raise its temperature) than aluminum.
Depends on how high you want to raise the gram of water ;).
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Heat capacity is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of a material one degree.
23joules
Specific temperature is an amount of heat per unit mass required to raise the temperature by one degree Celsius.
itz gold ..
How much heat energy is required to raise the temperature of 0.358 of copper from 23.0 to 60.0 ? The specific heat of copper is 0.0920
13,455 J