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The specific heat of the human body calculated from the measured values of individual tissues is 2.98 kJ · kg−1 · °C−1. This is 17% lower than the earlier wider used one based on non measured values of 3.47 kJ · kg−1· °C−1.
The specific heat capacities of iron, granite, and hydrogen gas are about 449 J⋅kg −1 ⋅K −1, 790 J⋅kg −1 ⋅K −1, and 14300 J⋅kg −1 ⋅K −1, respectively. [4] While the substance is undergoing a phase transition , such as melting or boiling, its specific heat capacity is technically undefined, because the heat goes into ...
Quantity (common name/s) (Common) symbol/s Defining equation SI unit Dimension General heat/thermal capacity C = / J⋅K −1: ML 2 T −2 Θ −1: Heat capacity (isobaric)
The table below lists units supported by ... 1.0 st (14 lb; 6.4 kg) st kg; st lb; ... °C K (C K) °C °R (C R)
A default may specify a unit code or an expression that tests the input value, and which produces one of two different outputs depending on that value. In the expression, v represents the input value specified in the convert template, and exclamation marks (!) are used to separate the expression into either three or four fields.
Hydrogen (300 K, 1 atm) 160 [14] Gold: 127 [15] Copper at 25 °C: 111 [13] Aluminium: 97 [15] Silicon 88 [15] Al-10Si-Mn-Mg (Silafont 36) at 20 °C: 74.2 [16] Aluminium 6061-T6 Alloy: 64 [15] Molybdenum (99.95%) at 25 °C: 54.3 [17] Al-5Mg-2Si-Mn (Magsimal-59) at 20 °C: 44.0 [18] Tin 40 [15] Water vapor (1 atm, 400 K) 23.38 Iron: 23 [15] Argon ...
Instead the formula that would fit some of the Bonales data is k ≈ 2.0526 - 0.0176TC and not k = -0.0176 + 2.0526T as they say on page S615 and also the values they posted for Alexiades and Solomon do not fit the other formula that they posted on table 1 on page S611 and the formula that would fit over there is k = 2.18 - 0.01365TC and not k ...
If a template uses {{Infobox person/weight|{{{weight}}}|kg-stlb=yes}}, then an article using that template with an input in kg will display two conversions: lb followed by st/lb (default is one conversion to lb): |weight=100 kg → 100 kg (220 lb; 15 st 10 lb) |weight=108–111 kg → 108–111 kg (238–245 lb; 17 st 0 lb – 17 st 7 lb)