Yes; it's related to joules
calorie
Joule, calorie, BTU (British Thermal Unit)
Wrong. The calorie is not an SI unit, and it is confusing because it comes in two varieties: gram when spelled calorie (small c) and Kilogram when spelled Calorie (Capital C). The SI energy unit is the Joule.
there is a device called a hydrometer that measures humidity. theres a unit to measure heat called a calorie. those are two to measure it!
One energy unit starting with C is a calorie, which is a unit of energy commonly used in nutrition to measure the energy content of food. Another energy unit is a coulomb, which measures electrical charge.
A calorie is a unit of measure for the potenetial energy stored inside of a molecule, or a measure of the amount of energy it takes to raise one gram of water 1 degree celsius.
A calorie with a lowercase "c" is a unit of energy commonly used to measure the energy content of food. A Calorie with an uppercase "C" is equivalent to 1,000 calories and is often used interchangeably with kilocalorie (kcal) on nutrition labels.
Yes. A calorie is just a unit of measure for energy
Calorie is the unit used to express chemical energy in food.
The most common unit for heat is a calorie. One calorie is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of water 1 degree. this should not be confused with the word calorie used to measure food intake - that is actually the kilocalorie. Units of heat include BTU (British Thermal Unit), calorie, and therm.
A kilocalories is a bigger unit of measure than the calorie is.
In SI, the unit is the joule. In cgsA units, it's the calorie. In Imperial System its a British Thermal Unit.