Physics, asked by surabhijatte667, 5 months ago

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Answers

Answered by InzemanShah
1

Answer:

Specific heat capacity is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of a substance by 1 kelvin (SI unit of specific heat capacity J kg−1 K−1).

Explanation:

Experiment to prove different substances have different specific heat capacities: Take three balls of iron, copper and lead of equal mass and put them in boiling water for some time. Then, take them out of the water and measure their temperature. ... This property is called the specific heat capacity.

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