350 calories of heat is added to a sample of nitrogen gas and the temperature is increased by 89 degrees Celsius. What is the mass of the nitrogen sample in cal/gram Celsius?

Mass is measured in grams, not cal/gram celsius. Specific heat is measured in cal/g*C. .

q = mass x specific heat x delta T. Look up specific heat for N2 gas, substitute 89 for delta T and 350 cal for q1, calculate mass in grams.

so if I am given the specific heat of 0.25 cal/g*C, then would my answer be

1.25 x 10^5 grams?

Not on my calculator.

350 = mass x 0.25 x 89
mass = [350/(0.25*89)] = about 16 or so grams.

To find the mass of the nitrogen sample in cal/gram °C, we need to use specific heat capacity.

The specific heat capacity (C) is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by 1 gram through 1 degree Celsius. For nitrogen gas, the specific heat capacity is 0.243 cal/gram °C.

We are given that 350 calories of heat is added to the nitrogen gas and the temperature is increased by 89 degrees Celsius. We can use the formula:

Q = m * C * ΔT

Where:
Q = Heat energy added (in calories)
m = Mass of the sample (in grams)
C = Specific heat capacity (in cal/gram °C)
ΔT = Change in temperature (in °C)

Rearranging the formula to solve for mass (m), we have:

m = Q / (C * ΔT)

Plugging in the given values:

m = 350 cal / (0.243 cal/gram °C * 89 °C)

Calculating:

m = 350 / (0.243 * 89)
m ≈ 1.634 grams (rounded to three decimal places)

Therefore, the mass of the nitrogen sample is approximately 1.634 grams in cal/gram °C.