amount of heat that is needed to raise the temprature of one gram of materal by 1deg C
Cp= J/deg C- g
Heat capacity is a scalar quantity, as it does not have a direction associated with it. It is a measure of the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount.
Heat capacity depends on the substance's mass, the substance's specific heat capacity, and the temperature at which the substance is being heated. It is a measure of how much energy is required to raise the temperature of a substance by one degree Celsius.
The relationship between temperature change and heat capacity at constant pressure is that as the temperature increases, the heat capacity also increases. Heat capacity is a measure of how much heat energy is needed to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount, and it tends to increase with temperature because the substance can absorb more heat energy as it gets hotter.
A thermometer bulb should have.small heat capacity. In case if it has large capacity, the temperature of the substance will get lowered due to the large amount of heat absorbed by the thermometer bulb
No. As Temperature isn't by any way a measure of how much energy is ''stored'' in a substance, it vary with the heat capacity of the said substance...«Heat capacity (usually denoted by a capital C, often with subscripts), or thermal capacity, is the measurable physical quantity that characterizes the amount of heat required to change a substance's temperature by a given amount. In the International System of Units (SI), heat capacity is expressed in units of joule(s) (J) per kelvin (K).»
Heat capacity is a scalar quantity, as it does not have a direction associated with it. It is a measure of the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount.
Temperature measures relative energy of an object. It does not measure heat. The amount of heat (energy) depends on the size of the object, the nature of the material / its heat capacity.
Temperature measures relative energy of an object. It does not measure heat. The amount of heat (energy) depends on the size of the object, the nature of the material / its heat capacity.
Temperature measures relative energy of an object. It does not measure heat. The amount of heat (energy) depends on the size of the object, the nature of the material / its heat capacity.
Heat capacity depends on the substance's mass, the substance's specific heat capacity, and the temperature at which the substance is being heated. It is a measure of how much energy is required to raise the temperature of a substance by one degree Celsius.
The physical quantity which is used to measure the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of a given substance is known as heat capacity or thermal capacity. Its S.I. unit is J/K.
Specific heat is the heat capacity divided by the heat capacity of water, which makes it dimensionless. To obtain molar heat capacity from specific heat for a material of interest, simply multiply the specific heat by the heat capacity of water per gram [1 cal/(g*C)]and multiply by the molecular weight of the substance of interest. For example, to obtain the molar heat capacity of iron Specific heat of iron = 0.15 (note there are no units) Molar heat capacity of iron = 0.15*1 cal/(g*C)*55.85 g /gmole = 8.378 cal/(gmole*C)
The relationship between temperature change and heat capacity at constant pressure is that as the temperature increases, the heat capacity also increases. Heat capacity is a measure of how much heat energy is needed to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount, and it tends to increase with temperature because the substance can absorb more heat energy as it gets hotter.
A thermometer bulb should have.small heat capacity. In case if it has large capacity, the temperature of the substance will get lowered due to the large amount of heat absorbed by the thermometer bulb
No. As Temperature isn't by any way a measure of how much energy is ''stored'' in a substance, it vary with the heat capacity of the said substance...«Heat capacity (usually denoted by a capital C, often with subscripts), or thermal capacity, is the measurable physical quantity that characterizes the amount of heat required to change a substance's temperature by a given amount. In the International System of Units (SI), heat capacity is expressed in units of joule(s) (J) per kelvin (K).»
The specific heat capacity of a wire depends on the material it is made of. For most metals, the specific heat capacity is around 0.5 - 0.9 J/g°C. It is a measure of how much heat energy is required to raise the temperature of one gram of the material by one degree Celsius.
No, metal with high heat capacity will not necessarily raise the temperature of water more than a metal with low heat capacity. Heat capacity is a measure of the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount, so a metal with higher heat capacity can hold more heat energy but may not necessarily transfer it more efficiently to the water. The efficiency of heat transfer depends on factors like conductivity and surface area of the metal.