If the specific heat of water is 1.0 calorie/gram C how many calories are required to raise 500 grams of water 10.0C

If you truly want a physics or chem tutor to help you, you'd do better to post the REAL subject, not some abbreviation that they may not recognize.

the subject is integrated physics and chemistry

To find the number of calories required to raise 500 grams of water by 10.0°C, you can use the formula:

Q = m * C * ΔT

Where:
Q is the amount of heat energy required
m is the mass of the substance (in this case, water) in grams
C is the specific heat capacity of the substance
ΔT is the change in temperature

In this case, m = 500 grams, C = 1.0 calorie/gram°C, and ΔT = 10.0°C.

Plugging the values into the formula, we have:

Q = 500 grams * 1.0 calorie/gram°C * 10.0°C

Simplifying the expression, we get:

Q = 5000 calories

Therefore, 5000 calories are required to raise 500 grams of water by 10.0°C.

writeacher. ipc is Integrated Physics and Chemistry

^ it kind of brings together chemistry and physics into one class.