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Measuring Heat 1 Heat Heat is defined as the flow of energy from something warm to something cooler because of the difference in their temperatures LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 2 Learning Check A. When you touch ice, 1) heat is transferred from your hand to the ice 2) coldness flows from the ice to your hand B. When you drink a hot cup of coffee, heat is transferred from 1) your mouth to the coffee 2) the coffee to your mouth LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 3 Specific Heat Why do some foods stay hot longer than others? When you go to the beach, why is the sand hot, but the water is cool on the same hot day? LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 4 Specific Heat Values Specific heat is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 g of a substance by 1°C J/g°C water 4.18 aluminum copper silver gold 0.90 0.39 0.24 0.13 LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 5 Learning Check A. A substance with a large specific heat 1) heats up quickly 2) heats up slowly B. When ocean water cools, the surrounding air 1) cools 2) warms 3) stays the same C. Sand in the desert is hot in the day, and cool at night. Sand must have a 1) high specific heat 2) low specific heat LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 6 Measuring Heat Gained or Lost Requires Grams of substance Temperature change T Specific heat of the substance LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 7 Calculating Heat q = mass x temp. change x specific heat LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 8 Sample Heat Calculation A hot-water bottle contains 750 g of water at 65°C. If the water cools to body temperature (37°C), how much heat could be transferred to sore muscles? heat = mass x T 750 g x 28°C x Sp. Ht. (H2O) x 4.18 J g°C = 88,000 J LecturePLUS Timberlake 99 9