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snow_lady [41]
3 years ago
15

How is thermal energy apart of weather changing

Chemistry
1 answer:
kirza4 [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Heat, in the form of thermal energy, naturally moves from warmer substances to colder ones. When the ocean is warmer than the atmosphere, it transfers heat — through conduction and radiation — to make the air warmer. ... This redistributes thermal energy and causes changes in the weather.

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Explain why sharpening a pencil is a different type of physical change it freezing water to make ice cubes
laila [671]
Because you can't make the pencil go back to normal form
8 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
11. What is the specific heat of a substance with a mass of 25.5 g that requires 412 J
Romashka-Z-Leto [24]

Answer:

297 J

Explanation:

The key to this problem lies with aluminium's specific heat, which as you know tells you how much heat is needed in order to increase the temperature of

1 g

of a given substance by

1

∘

C

.

In your case, aluminium is said to have a specific heat of

0.90

J

g

∘

C

.

So, what does that tell you?

In order to increase the temperature of

1 g

of aluminium by

1

∘

C

, you need to provide it with

0.90 J

of heat.

But remember, this is how much you need to provide for every gram of aluminium in order to increase its temperature by

1

∘

C

. So if you wanted to increase the temperature of

10.0 g

of aluminium by

1

∘

C

, you'd have to provide it with

1 gram



0.90 J

+

1 gram



0.90 J

+

...

+

1 gram



0.90 J



10 times

=

10

×

0.90 J

However, you don't want to increase the temperature of the sample by

1

∘

C

, you want to increase it by

Δ

T

=

55

∘

C

−

22

∘

C

=

33

∘

C

This means that you're going to have to use that much heat for every degree Celsius you want the temperature to change. You can thus say that

1

∘

C



10

×

0.90 J

+

1

∘

C



10

×

0.90 J

+

...

+

1

∘

C



10

×

0.90 J



33 times

=

33

×

10

×

0.90 J

Therefore, the total amount of heat needed to increase the temperature of

10.0 g

of aluminium by

33

∘

C

will be

q

=

10.0

g

⋅

0.90

J

g

∘

C

⋅

33

∘

C

q

=

297 J

I'll leave the answer rounded to three sig figs, despite the fact that your values only justify two sig figs.

For future reference, this equation will come in handy

q

=

m

⋅

c

⋅

Δ

T

, where

q

- the amount of heat added / removed

m

- the mass of the substance

c

- the specific heat of the substance

Δ

T

- the change in temperature, defined as the difference between the final temperature and the initial temperature of the sample

6 0
4 years ago
How many grams of KBr are present in 250.0mL of a 1.20M solution
castortr0y [4]
Molar mass KBr = 119 g/mol

Volume in liters: 250.0mL / 1000 => 0.25 L

n = M x V

n = 1.20 x 0,25 => 0.3 moles of KBr

Therefore:

1 mole KBr ----------- 119 g
0.3 moles KBr -------- ??

0.3 x 119 / 1 => 35.7 g of KBr 
4 0
3 years ago
Which equation represents the reaction of a weak acid with water?
shusha [124]
Acid is anything which will give H+ to other species.

Have a look at the equations given.

In A) HCl changes to Cl- by giving its H+ to H2O. So HCl is an acid.

In B) HCO3- changes to H2CO3^2- by accepting H+. It did Not give its H+ rather it takes from other species. So it is not an acid at all.

In C) H2O is just breaking to H+ and OH-. It is not giving H+ to other species. So it is also not an acid in this reaction.

In D) HCOOH is giving its H+ to H2O. So it is also an acid.

So out of all reactions with water. The only two species are acting as acid with water namely HCl and HCOOH.

Out of these two HCl is very strong acid but HCOOH is a weak acid.

So the answer is D
6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Two trays of lasagna are identical except for their thermal energies.
Akimi4 [234]

Answer:

the one with less thermal energy

Explanation:

thermal energy is heat

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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