The Specific Heat Capacity of water is 4,184 Joules per kg per Kelvin
No. Those are units of temperature. Heat is measured in units of energy, such as the joule.
Specific heat of air is 0.24 BTU/lb/degree F
125 British Thermal Units (the mesure or heat energy)
In SI, all forms of energy are measured in joules.
In SI units, temperature is measured in Kelvin (K), and when people record the "heat" (such as how warm a room is, etc.) they usually mean temperature. If you mean heat in the strict scientific sense, you're talking about a transfer of energy, and energy has SI units of Joules.
Heat is molecular motion; the units are BTU and calories.
Heat is molecular motion; the units are BTU and calories.
No. Those are units of temperature. Heat is measured in units of energy, such as the joule.
Standard units of heat is Joules.
It depends on what series of units you are using. There are calories, joules and British Thermal Units.
In SI units: kJ/kmol
Fahrenheit and Celsius
joule
You can use the same units (energy units) for both.
specifc heat is measured by units
Heat is molecular motion; the units are BTU and calories.
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