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calorie
(redirected from Thermodynamic calorie)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.04 sec.
calorie, abbr. cal, unit of heat heat, nonmechanical energy in transit, associated with differences in temperature between a system and its surroundings or between parts of the same system.

Measures of Heat


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 energy in the metric system. The measurement of heat is called calorimetry calorimetry (kăl'ərĭm`ətrē), measurement of heat and the determination of heat capacity .
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. The calorie, or gram calorie, is the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of pure water 1°C;. The kilocalorie, or kilogram calorie, is the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of pure water 1°C;; it is equal to 1,000 cal. The kilocalorie is used in dietetics for stating the heat content of a food, i.e., the amount of heat energy that the food can yield as it passes through the body; in this context, the kilocalorie is usually called simply the calorie. The amount of heat energy needed to effect a 1°C; temperature increase in 1 gram of water varies with temperature (see heat capacity); thus the temperature range over which the heating takes place must be stated to define the calorie precisely. The 15° calorie, or normal calorie, is widely used in chemistry and physics; it is measured by heating a 1-gram water sample from 14.5°C; to 15.5°C; at 1 atmosphere pressure. The 4° calorie, also called the small calorie or therm, is measured from 3.5°C; to 4.5°C; (water is most dense at 3.98°C;); the large calorie, or Calorie, is equivalent to 1,000 small calories. The average value of the calorie in the range 0°C; to 100°C; is called the mean calorie; it is 1-100 of the energy needed to heat 1 gram of water from its melting point to its boiling point. The calorie may also be defined by expressing its value in some other energy units. The 15° calorie is equivalent to 4.185 joules joule (jl, joul), abbr.
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 (J), 1.162×10−6 kilowatt-hours, 3.968×10−3 British thermal units, and 3.087 foot-pounds; the 4° calorie equals 4.204 J; and the mean calorie equals 4.190 J. Two other calories sometimes used are the International Steam Table calorie, equal to 4.187 J, and the thermochemical calorie, equal to 4.184 J. When the calorie is used for precision measurement of heat energy, the particular calorie being used must be specified.

calorie

Unit of energy or heat. Various precise definitions are used for different purposes (physical chemistry measurements, engineering steam tables, and thermochemistry), but in all cases the calorie is about 4.2 joules, the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 g of water by 1 °C (1.8 °F) at normal atmospheric pressure. The calorie used by dietitians and food scientists and found on food labels is actually the kilocalorie (also called Calorie and abbreviated kcal or Cal), or 1,000 calories. It is a measure of the amount of heat energy or metabolic energy contained in the chemical bonds (see bonding) of a food.


calorie, calory
a unit of heat, equal to 4.1868 joules (International Table calorie): formerly defined as the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1°C under standard conditions. It has now largely been replaced by the joule for scientific purposes

Calorie
1. a unit of heat, equal to one thousand calories, often used to express the heat output of an organism or the energy value of food
2. the amount of a specific food capable of producing one thousand calories of energy

calorie [′kal·ə·rē]
(thermodynamics)
Abbreviated cal; often designated c.
A unit of heat energy, equal to 4.1868 joules. Also known as International Table calorie (IT calorie).
A unit of energy, equal to the heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water from 14.5° to 15.5°C at a constant pressure of 1 standard atmosphere; equal to 4.1855 ± 0.0005 joules. Also known as fifteen-degrees calorie; gram-calorie (g-cal); small calorie.
A unit of heat energy equal to 4.184 joules; used in thermochemistry. Also known as thermochemical calorie.


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