In the previous visual we used water. Would we have got the same results with other substances?
We know, for example, that when we put a metal spoon into a plate of hot soup its temperature quickly rises, something which doesn't happen if it is a wooden spoon. This observation and others like it led to a characteristic magnitude of a body being defined according to its nature, specific heat.
Specific heat is the necessary energy that the unit mass of a body needs to exchange with the environment in order to vary its temperature by one degree; its units are j/kg oC in the Système International, although in the laboratory it is more usual to use calorie/gºC , where calorie is the heat necessary to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree.
In the following visual we compare heating water with heating ethyl alcohol. |