| specific heat capacity |
(Or specific heat.) The heat capacity of a system divided by its mass. It is a property solely of the substance of which the system is composed. As with heat capacities, specific heats are commonly defined for processes occurring at either constant volume (c v ) or constant pressure (c p ). For an ideal gas, both are constant with temperature and related by c p = c v + R with R the gas constant. ...
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| specific heat capacity |
The amount of heat required to increase the temperature of one gram of a substance by one degree.
Ãâó: misterguch.brinkster.net/vocabulary.html
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| specific heat capacity |
the quantity of heat needed to raise the temperature of unit mass of a particular substance by one degree kelvin.
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| specific heat capacity |
This is the amount of heat (in calories or Joules) that must be added or removed from a unit mass of that substance to change its temperature by one degree. Different substances have different capacities because they absorb and release heat at different rates.
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