The average value should be about 0.438
B Glass
For window glass, about 3.5 times as much. The specific heat is the amount of heat per unit mass required to raise the temperature by one degree Celsius.The specific heat of glass is 0.20 (kcal/kg °C)The specific heat of silver is 0.05580.2/0.0558=3.58423
Glass does not "do" anything with heat. Glass is not a (thermal) insulator though.
Glass is a poor conductor of heat.
Yes, glass will conduct heat, only not as well as metals.
5120 j/g k is the specific heat capacity
B Glass
Yes, but only at the temperature recommended for the specific type of glass.
Water.
selon wikipedia dans heat capacity, glass, pyrex = 0753 J/K g
Specific heat capacity
For window glass, about 3.5 times as much. The specific heat is the amount of heat per unit mass required to raise the temperature by one degree Celsius.The specific heat of glass is 0.20 (kcal/kg °C)The specific heat of silver is 0.05580.2/0.0558=3.58423
Glass does not "do" anything with heat. Glass is not a (thermal) insulator though.
It takes 1 calorie to raise 1 gram of water 1°C. Therefore, the specific heat of water is 1 cal/g°C.The specific heat of glass depends on it's composition. Plain/window glass is 0.2 cal/g°C; Crystal/plate glass is 0.12 cal/g°C; and Pyrex glass is 0.18 cal/g°C.To raise 1 gram of glass 10°C would then take between 1.2 and 2.0 calories.
YUPPERS! and it will trap most of it but not all 2nd Answer: Ummm . . . a glass window does not attract heat. It does not 'trap' it, either. The glass may allow heat through, or glass can heat up, itself, but then it can radiate that heat away when the air around the glass is cooler than it is. That is certainly not, "Trapping" the heat.
heat willcut glass.
Glass is a poor conductor of heat.