Physics, asked by RAMGOPAL, 1 year ago

The specific heat of a gas at constant pressure is greater than the specific heat at constant volume, because

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Answered by Tigerrajvirland
1
At constant volume all the heat that goes into the system goes into raising the temperature of the system and no external work is done. At constant pressure some of the heat goes into expanding the system which does external work and therefore leaves less energy available for raising the temperature
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