Asked by Brigid
I'm trying to determine the specific heat of copper by experiment and I have a question about the change in temperature of the copper. If I take the copper out of boiling water at 100 deg. C and place it in water at 10 degrees C, the temp. of the water increases to 14 deg. Is the change in the temperature of the copper 100-14=86 deg. or is it just the 4 degrees that the water took to increase its temperature by 4 deg.
Answers
Answered by
drwls
At thermal equilibrium, when everythng is 14 C, the temperature change of the copper is -86 C, and +4C for the water. The heat energy lost by the copper equals the energy gained by the water. Writing that equation with the water specific heat and masses will let you solve for the specifric heat of copper. You have not provided the masses in your problem statement. You should have recorded them during the experiment.
Answered by
Brigid
Thanks so much for clearing that up!
Answered by
Racha
A 2.5 kg aluminum is heated to 92 degree C and then dropped into 8 kg of water 5 degree C. assuming that water metal system is thermally isolated what is the system equilibrium temperater?
Answered by
Tammy
How much heat in kcal must be added to 0.5kg of water at room temperature (20°C) to raise its temperature to 50°C?
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