The amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance 1 degree celsius varies depending on the substance. This value is called the specific heat.
This is the specific heat.
specific heat(; your welcome!
Probably one of the followings:1 joule of a substance by 1 kelvin1 kilogram of a substance by 1 kelvin1 kilogram of a substance by 1 jouleor 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree FahrenheitI'm not sure which one exactly, but I'm pretty sure its one of those.of any substancespecific heat capacity is defined as the amount of heat required to change the temperature of one unit mass of any substance by 1°C or 1KSpecific heat capacity, Cg is the energy needed to raise 1 gram of the substance 1 degree Kelvin (or Celsius)The units are J g-1 K-1Energy = Cg x mass x change in TThe specific heat of water is 4.18 J g-1K-1(Imperial units uses the calorie as a unit of energy.The specific heat capacity of water is 1.0 cal g-1 K-1)
Gram is a unit of measure, for mass.
According to the Energy Constants of water, there are two possible answers. The heat capacity for solid is 2.1 J/goC, or for every 1 gram of solid water given 2.1 Joules of energy, 1 degree will change. The heat capacity for liquid is 4.18J/g oC, or for every 1 gram of liquid water given 4.18 Joules of energy, 1 degree will change. The amount of energy put in/taken out will change the substance. Heat is a form of energy.
The amount of heat necessary to raise 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree Celsius is known as?
specific heat(; your welcome!
specific heat(; your welcome!
The specific heat of a substance is the heat required to raise the temperature of one gram of the substance one degree centigrade.
Probably one of the followings:1 joule of a substance by 1 kelvin1 kilogram of a substance by 1 kelvin1 kilogram of a substance by 1 jouleor 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree FahrenheitI'm not sure which one exactly, but I'm pretty sure its one of those.of any substancespecific heat capacity is defined as the amount of heat required to change the temperature of one unit mass of any substance by 1°C or 1KSpecific heat capacity, Cg is the energy needed to raise 1 gram of the substance 1 degree Kelvin (or Celsius)The units are J g-1 K-1Energy = Cg x mass x change in TThe specific heat of water is 4.18 J g-1K-1(Imperial units uses the calorie as a unit of energy.The specific heat capacity of water is 1.0 cal g-1 K-1)
It depends on the specific energy of the substance.
The amount of heat a substance can hold.
To lower the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree Celsius would be to remove 1 calorie.
10 degreeC
Gram is a unit of measure, for mass.
The amount of energy required to raise 1 kg of a substance by 1 degree Celsius is called the "Specific Heat Capacity," or just specific heat, of a substance. This is an intensive property of the particular substance.
A substance's molar specific heat capacity is the amount of energy required to raise one mole of that substance 1 degree Celsius.For water, this is exactly one calorie, assuming the state of the water does not change. Otherwise, it depends on the substance, and the substance's current temperature and state.for apex its latent
heat of fusion