energy -- temperature
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Heat is measured in unit of what...
In SI, specific heat capacity is measured in joules per kilogram kelvin.
No, Fahrenheit is the Imperial Unit for temperature, not heat. Heat is energy in transit and is measured in joules (in the SI sytem).
Enthalpy is the measurement of heat, Joule (J) is the unit. Temperature is not a measurement of heat. Temperature has the unit Kelvin (K) or Celsius (oC)
The word "heat" as used in physics refers to heat energy, so it is logically measured in units of energy. The international unit for energy is the joule. Heat energy is sometimes still measured in the old-fashioned unit "calorie" instead.
measured in Calories, Btu, Joules, ...
All types of energy are measured in joules. Heat is a type of energy.
It is the amount of heat (measured in the proper unit, say calories) required to change a unit mass (measured in the proper units, say gram) of a substance from the solid to the liquid state. This would also be the heat given out by a unit mass of the liquid when it changes to the solid state.
Heat is measured in BTUs (British Thermal Units)Further AnswerHeat is energy in transit from a warmer body to a cooler body, and, in the SI system is measured in joules(J). In the older, cgs system it was measured in calories. In the Imperial system it was measured in BTUs.
No, but it is a type of energy, and it is measured in energy unites (joules, in the International System).
Well there are quite a few for example calories, joules and kilojoules.
Energy is measured in joules. Sometimes the older unit "calorie" is used instead - this is a unit defined on the basis of heat, but it is still a unit of energy.