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Heat required to raise the temperature of 1 Kg. of Pure water is called a Calorie or otherwise heat released on condensation of 1 Kg of pure water when it is condensed by 1 C is also a Calorie. Again if 1 pound pure water's temperature is raised by 1 F, the quantity of heat is 1 BTU (British Thermal Unit)
Heat or calorie
One Calorie or one kilocalorie raise the the temperature of one kilo gram of water by one degree Celsius. Here the 'C' is capital. Your calorie raises the temperature of one milliliter of water by one degree Celsius. Here the 'c' is small.
I believe it is a calorie.One Calorie.
The statement is false due to it should be stated one Kilogram of water NOT one gram of water in order to be correct. Actually correct because it is calorie with a small c. The Calorie with a big "C" is kilocalorie which would raise the temperature of a kilogram of water.
it doesn't it raises the average energy a particle has. that's temperature not heat.
Temperature is a scalar quantity. It has magnitude but not direction.
4.184 joules. The is the specific heat or Cp of water is 4.184 J/mol.
The metric unit is the calorie, which is the amount of heat needed to increase the temperature of a gram of pure water one degree Celsius. The standard unit is the British Thermal Unit (BTU), which is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of a pound of pure water one degree Fahrenheit.
heat is the energy that raises temperature
Heat and temperature are not the same physical quantity. Heat is the cause and temperature is the effect. Heat is measured in joule and temperature in kelvin. Q = m s @ Q - the quantity of heat, @ is the temperature difference. They are proportional. So expecting both to be the same is almost meaning less. If suppose 'm*s' happens to be 1, then Q and @ will be having the same numerical value. Yet they are different physical quantities.