Physics, asked by gulammian023, 5 months ago

16: The amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of one mole of
the
gas through 1 K at constant pressure is called molar heat
(a) Capacity at constant volume
(b) Capacity at constant pressure
(c) Capacity at constant moles
(d) Capacity at constant temperature​

Answers

Answered by aasimpatel55
0

Answer:

from my opinion the answer is D

Answered by manishgupta1111
0

Answer:

plz mark this answer as brainlist

Explanation:

Specific heat capacity at constant volume is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 g of the gas through 1ºC keeping volume of the gas constant. If we take 1 mole of gas in the barrel, the corresponding specific heat capacity is called Gram molar specific heat capacity at constant volume.

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