A 6.75-g sample of gold (specific heat capacity = 0.130 J/g °C) is heated using 55.8 J of energy. If the original temperature of the gold is 25.0°C, what is its final temperature?

i got 88.6 degree celcius is it right?

q = mass Au x specific heat Au x (Tfinal-Tinitial)

right

Q=m*s*dT

To find the final temperature of the gold, we can use the formula:

Q = m * c * ΔT

Where:
Q is the amount of energy transferred to the substance (in joules),
m is the mass of the substance (in grams),
c is the specific heat capacity of the substance (in J/g °C),
ΔT is the change in temperature (in °C).

In this case, we know:
Q = 55.8 J
m = 6.75 g
c = 0.130 J/g °C
ΔT = ?

Rearranging the formula, we have:

ΔT = Q / (m * c)

Substituting the given values, we get:

ΔT = 55.8 J / (6.75 g * 0.130 J/g °C)

Simplifying further:

ΔT = 55.8 J / 0.8775 J/°C

Calculating:

ΔT = 63.57 °C

Since we want to find the final temperature, we add ΔT to the initial temperature:

Final temperature = Initial temperature + ΔT

Final temperature = 25.0 °C + 63.57 °C

Final temperature ≈ 88.6 °C

Therefore, the final temperature of the gold is approximately 88.6 °C.