Want this question answered?
The large bowl contains the most heat energy.
1,277,800 j
No, Fahrenheit is the Imperial Unit for temperature, not heat. Heat is energy in transit and is measured in joules (in the SI sytem).
The answer will depend on the quantity of the liquid and its specific heat.
Heat is far from useless energy. Without this energy force you would die. Furthermore, without the heat internal combustion motors would never work. No Heat=Pluto. Heat is not listed as a "form" of energy. Heat is the transfer of energy from a warmer body or region to a cooler one. As for internal combustion engines heat is a by product when they r turning chemical energy into kinetic energy. Also car engines are about 25% efficient when you look at output energy over input energy. You lose 75% to friction, sound, heat, etc..
The large bowl contains the most heat energy.
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It has a much higher volume of water compared to the tea cup. It takes less energy to heat a small amount of liquid such as a tea cup.
O.385x1x2=0.77 Answer: 0.77
The amount of water whose temperature would change by 15 degrees Celsius when it absorbs 2646 joules of heat energy is 42,2g H2O.
Heat is measured in unit of what...
Heat is thermal energy.
If you want to be pedantic, scientists measure temperature in kelvins, not degrees. Heat is energy and is measured in energy units, like joules.
No, it measures the ammount of heat output that would heat a millilitre of water 1 degree Celsius. So if you were to burn 1000 calories of energy, it would heat one millilitre 1000 degrees Celsius or it would heat 1 litre 1 degree Celsius.
Heat energy is measured as temperature in Kelvins [K] (also degrees Celsius [°C] and degrees Fahrenheit [°F]) and tells us the average kinetic energy of the molecules.
yes. It would cause liquid helium to boil if you mixed them.
a small bowl as it can heat up quicker than a larger bowl and with a big bowl when the heat comes in it is easier for it to come out?