Calorimetry

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
מדידת חום
Name (Latin)
Calorimetry
Name (Arabic)
القياسات الحرارية
Other forms of name
nne Calorimeters and calorimetry
See Also From tracing topical name
Temperature measurements
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q634314
Library of congress: sh 89005787
Sources of Information
  • Chambers sci. tech. dict.
  • Encyc. phys. sci. tech.
  • Encyc. physics(Science of measuring the quantity of heat absorbed or evolved by matter when it undergoes a change in its chemical or physical state)
  • INSPEC.
  • McGraw-Hill dict. sci. tech.
  • Random House.
  • Thesaurofacet.
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Wikipedia description:

In chemistry and thermodynamics, calorimetry (from Latin calor 'heat' and Greek μέτρον (metron) 'measure') is the science or act of measuring changes in state variables of a body for the purpose of deriving the heat transfer associated with changes of its state due, for example, to chemical reactions, physical changes, or phase transitions under specified constraints. Calorimetry is performed with a calorimeter. Scottish physician and scientist Joseph Black, who was the first to recognize the distinction between heat and temperature, is said to be the founder of the science of calorimetry. Indirect calorimetry calculates heat that living organisms produce by measuring either their production of carbon dioxide and nitrogen waste (frequently ammonia in aquatic organisms, or urea in terrestrial ones), or from their consumption of oxygen. Lavoisier noted in 1780 that heat production can be predicted from oxygen consumption this way, using multiple regression. The dynamic energy budget theory explains why this procedure is correct. Heat generated by living organisms may also be measured by direct calorimetry, in which the entire organism is placed inside the calorimeter for the measurement. A widely used modern instrument is the differential scanning calorimeter, a device which allows thermal data to be obtained on small amounts of material. It involves heating the sample at a controlled rate and recording the heat flow either into or from the specimen.

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