In the equation Q equals m plus x t plus c, Q represents the total quantity or value being measured or calculated. t represents the variable or time period being observed or measured. c represents the constant term or the y-intercept, which is the value of Q when t equals zero.
The formula for finding the amount of heat transferred to an object is Q = mc(change in T). Q represents heat energy in J, m is the mass of the object in kg, and c is the specific heat of the material.
Q - 12 = 89 Add 12 to both sides of the equation. Q - 12 + 12 = 89 + 12 Q = 101
Q represents the set of all rational numbers, Zrepresents the set of all integers so Q excluding Z, represents all rationals that are not integers.
amount of heat energy
Q=mc∆T
Answer: Thermal Heat. Its Thermal somethingI just passed it and forgot the answer
Type your answer here... The variable Q
variable c
variable c
The variable c
It is not an equation, but q2 meaning q^2 represents q being multiplied by itself.
For gravity: Q = mgh For kinetic: Q = 1/2 m v^2 For heat: Q = mc(final temp. - initial temp) For electricity: Q = V I t
MC Q-Bah was born in 1983.
The equation is q = mC∆T where q is the heat; m is the mass of water; C is the specific heat of water (1 cal/g/deg); and ∆T is the change in temperature.
== Q== mc(delta)T == Q=thermal energy m= mass c=specific heat (ex. water is 4.184 J/goc) deltaT= change in temperature
There are many equations that represent the energy it takes to heat up a substance, depending on which aspect of "heating" you refer to. Probably the one in question here is q = mC∆T where q = amount of heat energy; m = mass of the object; C = specific heat of that object; ∆T= change in temperature.