Answer:
10 g
Step-by-step explanation:
Right from the start, just by inspecting the values given, you can say that the answer will be 
10 g 
. 
 
Now, here's what that is the case. 
 
As you know, a substance's specific heat tells you how much heat is needed to increase the temperature of 
1 g 
 of that substance by 
1 
∘ 
C 
. 
 
Water has a specific heat of approximately 
4.18 
J 
g 
∘ 
C 
. This tells you that in order to increase the temperature of 
1 g 
 of water by 
1 
∘ 
C 
, you need to provide 
4.18 J 
 of heat. 
 
Now, how much heat would be required to increase the temperature of 
1 g 
 of water by 
10 
∘ 
C 
? 
 
Well, you'd need 
4.18 J 
 to increase it by 
1 
∘ 
C 
, another 
4.18 J 
 to increase it by another 
1 
∘ 
C 
, and so on. This means that you'd need 
 
4.18 J 
× 
10 
= 
41.8 J 
 
to increase the temperature of 
1 g 
 of water by 
10 
∘ 
C 
. 
 
Now look at the value given to you. If you need 
41.8 J 
 to increase the temperature of 
1 g 
 of water by 
10 
∘ 
C 
, what mass of water would require 
10 
 times as much heat to increase its temperature by 
10 
∘ 
C 
? 
 
1 g 
× 
10 
= 
10 g 
 
And that's your answer. 
 
Mathematically, you can calculate this by using the equation 
 
q 
= 
m 
⋅ 
c 
⋅ 
Δ 
T 
 
, where 
 
q 
 - heat absorbed/lost 
m 
 - the mass of the sample 
c 
 - the specific heat of the substance 
Δ 
T 
 - the change in temperature, defined as final temperature minus initial temperature 
 
Plug in your values to get 
 
418 
J 
= 
m 
⋅ 
4.18 
J 
g 
∘ 
C 
⋅ 
( 
20 
− 
10 
) 
∘ 
C 
 
m 
= 
418 
4.18 
⋅ 
10 
= 
10 g