Physics, asked by Anupam2000, 1 year ago

Which metal would cause the greatest increase in the temperature of the water in the calorimeter: the one with the higher specific heat, or the one with the lower specific heat? Explain?

Answers

Answered by yash2723j
1
its so hard i cant answer it
Answered by dackpower
6

If we have to decide within a metal of high specific heat or low, which can increase in the temperature of the water in the calorimeter which gets submerged after heating. The answer will be highly specific heat because that element would hold more radiation, and then transport the larger amount of heat to the water.

The specific heat is the quantity of heat per unit mass expected to increase the temperature by one degree Celsius.  The association does not apply if a state change is confronted, because the heat combined or separated during a phase transition does not modify the temperature.

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