If a body of water has a high heat capacity, it can store more thermal energy making it a good heat sink.
1000 g of water
The specific heat capacity of water does not change much within-phase (ie, as a solid it has one specific heat capacity, as a liquid/gas it has another)
Water has a high heat capacity, so it can absorbs a lot of heat in comparison to other molecules of the same amount or volume.
100mbps
If a body of water has a high heat capacity, it can store more thermal energy making it a good heat sink.
1000 g of water
Water is covalently bonded and has a high heat capacity.
Heat capacity is a physical property.
Imagine 1 kg of water. This has a heat capacity. Now if you have 1000kg of water the heat capacity is obviously greater. The Specific Heat Capacity is a material constant. It specifies a set quantity. For water it is 4.184 kiloJoules per kilogram per Kelvin.
The specific heat capacity of water does not change much within-phase (ie, as a solid it has one specific heat capacity, as a liquid/gas it has another)
yes it does give a low heat capacity.
the specific heat capacity of water is 4200 J / kg °C
Water's surface tension and heat storage capacity is accounted by itsHydrogen Bonds
Molar heat capacity of liquid water = 75.3538 Molar heat capacity = molar mass x specific heat
by analing
100mbps