0.104 btu
One BTU is the energy required to raise one pound of water by one degrees. Therefore, your answer would be one half.
It doesn't work that way. There is not a certain number of btus to raise air temperature. You would have to know how much air. A BTU is the British Thermal Unit. That is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree F.
A US gallon of water is about 8.4 lb, so 30,000 galls is 252,000 lb. One BTU is the heat to raise one pound of water by one degF, so BTU's in your example are 252,000 x 15 = 3,780,000 BTU.
a mirror
There is one syllable in raise.
1 BTU needed to raise or lower 1degree F of 1 lb water
£39 million pound
One BTU is the energy required to raise one pound of water by one degrees. Therefore, your answer would be one half.
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6 pound 50 p
It will raise your boiling point very slightly, maybe 2 or 3 degrees.
After tutorial island you are given a bronze sword. With this kill monsters, raise money, to buy a higher, better one
Yes and it will also fall in the future too.
btu = the amount of heat needed to raise one pound of water one degree F
the boiling point of the water will raise 3 deg. frht. for every pound of pressure the cap is rated for. a 10lb. cap will raise the boiling temp to 242deg. frht.
It doesn't work that way. There is not a certain number of btus to raise air temperature. You would have to know how much air. A BTU is the British Thermal Unit. That is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree F.
The British Thermal Unit (BTU): The Amount of work required to raise one pound of water 1 degree Fahrenheit.