You need the heat capacities for these substances in order to answer this question. If you have those, it's simple algebra.
- 23 degrees
11 degrees
The answer will depend on what temperature scale these are in.
60 degrees Fahrenheit = 15.5 degrees Celsius.
32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 degrees Celsius
This happens because there is so much more water than there is horseshoe. The heat from the horseshoe is distributed throughout the water, so the amount of heat per unit of water is lower than the original amount of heat per unit of horseshoe.
It is 15188 Joules.
A thermometer is a tool used to measure temperature. It consists of a bulb containing a liquid (usually mercury or alcohol) that expands or contracts based on the temperature, and a scale to show the measurement in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit.
To calculate the time taken to raise the temperature by 10 degrees, you would need to know the rate at which the temperature is increasing. This can be determined by dividing the change in temperature (10 degrees) by the rate of temperature increase. The result will give you the time it takes to raise the temperature by 10 degrees.
The abbreviation for temperature degrees is °.
- 23 degrees
The change in temperature is 49 degrees, calculated by subtracting the final temperature (-4 degrees) from the initial temperature (45 degrees).
If the temperature decreases by 30 degrees Celsius from 20 degrees Celsius, the new temperature will be -10 degrees Celsius.
5 degrees fahrenheit
If the temperature was 90 degrees below zero and dropped 24 degrees, the new temperature would be 114 degrees below zero.
The Celsius temperature of 32 degrees Fahrenheit would be 0 degrees.
A Celsius temperature of 100 degrees is equivalent to a Fahrenheit temperature of 212 degrees.