I know how to figure out the calorimeter's constant most of the time, but this worksheet I have is calling for a method I've never used. It says:
A calorimeter is to be calibrated: 51.203 g of water at 55.2C is added to a colorimeter containing 49.783 g of water at 23.5C. After reaching equilibrium , the final temperature reached is 37.6C. Calculate the calorimeter constant.
How do I go about solving this? I know the specific heat of water is 4.18 J/g-K and that there are 100.986g water, but I don't know what the temperature change is.
EDIT: I found the formula (mC?T)warm water = -[(mC?T)cold water + (Ccalorimeter ?T)]. I'm assuming that the change in temperature is based on the cold to the equilibrium point and the warm to the equilibrium? Thus ?T for warm would be -17.6C and ?T for cold water would be 14.1C? Please tell me if I'm correct.