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.
A kilocalories is a bigger unit of measure than the calorie is.
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.
In SI, the unit is the joule. In cgsA units, it's the calorie. In Imperial System its a British Thermal Unit.