Latent heat is a type of heat, and heat is a type of energy. Therefore, units of energy are used. In the SI, that would be the joule.
Heat is a form of energy. In terms of kinetic theory it can be defined asthe sum of kinetic energy of molecules in a sample of a substance.-- Its SI unit is the Joule.-- Its CGS unit is the erg = 10-7 joule.Comment'Heat' is energy in transit between a warmer body and a cooler body. The definition given in the original answer is for 'internal energy', not heat.
No, meter is the SI unit of Length, Si unit of volume is meter3.
The Kelvin is the SI unit for thermodynamic temperature.
The SI unit for power, thermal or mechanical, is the watt, W. 1 W = 1 J/s (joule/second).
The Siemens is the SI unit for the connectivity.
The SI unit for heat is the same as for energy, the joule (newton-meter). The SI unit for temperature (comparative heat potential) is the Kelvin (K).
Jouls.
The SI unit for heat is the joule (J). Additionally, the calorie (cal) is a commonly used non-SI unit for heat, where 1 calorie is equivalent to 4.184 joules.
The SI unit for energy - any type of energy - is the Joule.The SI unit for energy - any type of energy - is the Joule.The SI unit for energy - any type of energy - is the Joule.The SI unit for energy - any type of energy - is the Joule.
... is called power. The SI unit for energy is the joule; the SI unit for power is joule/second = watt.
Heat is a form of energy. In terms of kinetic theory it can be defined asthe sum of kinetic energy of molecules in a sample of a substance.-- Its SI unit is the Joule.-- Its CGS unit is the erg = 10-7 joule.Comment'Heat' is energy in transit between a warmer body and a cooler body. The definition given in the original answer is for 'internal energy', not heat.
specific heat.
The SI unit of energy is the Joule The SI unit of energy is the Joule
The metric unit for heat is the calorie - the heat required to raise 1 gram of water by 1 deg C. In the SI unit system it would be the kilocalorie - the heat to raise 1 kg by 1 degC
In SI, specific heat capacity is measured in joules per kilogram kelvin.
The SI unit of heat is the joule. It is a derived unit of energy in the International System of Units. One joule is equal to the work done when a force of one newton acts over a distance of one meter.
"SI unit" and "metric unit" basically means the same. The only metric system used nowadays is the SI. For a specific object, the heat capacity is measured in J/K. To compare different materials, it is of interest to specify the heat capacity PER KILOGRAM, so the units are J / (K times kg). It is also possible to specify heat capacity in J / (K times mole). This would also be SI units.