It takes 9.00 to raise the temperature of an 8.60 piece of unknown metal from 22 to 25.0. What is the specific heat for the metal?

heat=mass*specificheat*changeintemp

Thanks bob, I've got the formula down, I'm now stuck on the equation. 9J=(8.60g) (X) (3.00 degrees celsius)

How do I solve this equation?

I think i got it. Is the answer 0.348837209?

To find the specific heat of the metal, we can use the formula:

Heat (Q) = mass (m) × specific heat (c) × change in temperature (ΔT)

Given:
Mass of the metal (m) = 8.60 g
Change in temperature (ΔT) = 25.0 °C - 22 °C = 3.0 °C
Heat (Q) = 9.00 cal

Let's substitute these values into the formula and solve for specific heat (c):

Q = mcΔT
9.00 cal = 8.60 g × c × 3.0 °C

Now, rearrange the equation to solve for c:

c = Q / (m × ΔT)
c = 9.00 cal / (8.60 g × 3.0 °C)

Now, let's calculate the specific heat:

c = 0.3488372093 cal/g°C (rounded to 4 decimal places)

Therefore, the specific heat for the metal is approximately 0.349 cal/g°C.