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determination of specific heat capacity of liquid by method of electrical heating
the spesific heat capacity of a liquid by the mithod of cooling
sand have low specific heat capacity.
heat capacity- ML2T-2K-1 Specific Heat Capacity-M0L2T-2K-1
what the specific heat usefull
determination of specific heat capacity of liquid by method of electrical heating
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)
the spesific heat capacity of a liquid by the mithod of cooling
no because the molar mass of lead is great than aluminum
specific heat capacity
The specific heat capacity of polyester is 2.35degrees
Whichever of them has the lowest specific heat capacity will take the least energy to raise its temperature, and whichever has the highest specific heat capacity will take the most energy.
The specific heat capacity of the blueberry filling is higher than the specific heat capacity of aluminum; therefore, the blueberry filling cools down after being removed from the oven much slower than the aluminum pan.
No. They would lose (or absorb) the same amount of heat, but their temperatures would be different.Every liquid has a unique specific heat capacity.The specific heat capacity of a substance is the amount of heat required to heat unit mass (1 kg) of that substance through 1°Celsius.So, liquids with different specific heats would show different change in temperature after losing the same amount of heat.For example, a liquid with a lower specific heat capacity would require lesser heat to change it's temperature while one with a higher specific heat capacity would require more heat.Hence, since the heat lost would be the same, the liquid with a lower specific heat capacity would cool more and have a lower temperature.
yes
sand have low specific heat capacity.
No. Metals have a relatively low specific heat.