The bigger he mass the more heatt required to change its temp.erature; Heat=m(T2-T1)
The heat capacity equation is Q mcT, where Q represents the amount of heat energy, m is the mass of the substance, c is the specific heat capacity of the substance, and T is the change in temperature. This equation is used to calculate the amount of heat required to change the temperature of a substance by multiplying the mass, specific heat capacity, and temperature change.
Energy transfer and temperature change are directly related. When energy is transferred to a substance, such as through heating, the temperature of the substance increases. The amount of temperature change depends on the amount of energy transferred and the specific heat capacity of the substance.
When heat is transferred in a space the average energy of the particles - the temperature of the substance - is affected, by increasing or decreasing. The change in temperature depends on the number of particles affected.
No, different materials have different specific heat capacities, which refers to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of that material by one degree Celsius. So, the same amount of different materials would not need the same amount of heat to achieve the same change in temperature.
Specific heat and latent heat are both properties of a substance that determine how it absorbs or releases thermal energy. Specific heat refers to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount, while latent heat is the amount of heat needed to change the state of a substance without a change in temperature. In thermal energy transfer, specific heat affects the temperature change of a substance, while latent heat is involved in phase changes such as melting or boiling.
The bigger he mass the more heatt required to change its temp.erature; Heat=m(T2-T1)
It is the amount of energy required to change the state of 1kg of a substance with no change in temperature.
It is the amount of energy required to change 1kg of solid into a liquid with no temperature change.
Is the amount of energy required to change 1kg of liquid into gas with no temperature change.
The heat capacity equation is Q mcT, where Q represents the amount of heat energy, m is the mass of the substance, c is the specific heat capacity of the substance, and T is the change in temperature. This equation is used to calculate the amount of heat required to change the temperature of a substance by multiplying the mass, specific heat capacity, and temperature change.
As the temperature increases, the phases change from having the slowest amount of molecules to having the fastest amount of molecules (solid-liquid-gas)
Energy transfer and temperature change are directly related. When energy is transferred to a substance, such as through heating, the temperature of the substance increases. The amount of temperature change depends on the amount of energy transferred and the specific heat capacity of the substance.
specific heat capacity
None - heat is evolved, not required.
Is the amount of energy that is required to change the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1 degree Celsius with no state change.
Latent heat- the amount of heat required by a system/ substance to change phase. It's also heat absorbed or radiated during a change of phase at a constant temperature and pressure.
When heat is transferred in a space the average energy of the particles - the temperature of the substance - is affected, by increasing or decreasing. The change in temperature depends on the number of particles affected.