Heating peanut butter can cause some of the moisture in the peanut butter to evaporate, resulting in a loss of mass due to water weight. However, this loss in mass is usually minimal and not very significant.
No, heating peanut butter will not increase its mass. Heating it may change its viscosity, making it easier to spread, but it will not physically increase in mass.
20 grams
* PeterPan * Jiff * Skippy * Reeses
One is mass one is volume you can't compare them. Close question.
yes because everything which occupies space and have mass is matter
No, heat does not increase mass. Heating an object can increase its internal energy and cause it to expand, but the total mass of the object remains the same.
Not any more than other foods with complete proteins. And without resistance exercise (weightlifting), you're not going to see any appreciable increase in muscle mass, no matter how much protein you consume.
No, an empty container will not increase in mass when heated. Heating an empty container will not create additional matter within the container to increase its mass.
1928
Yeah . Most peanut butter has about 7 grams of protein in it per serving. Also this protein is a better protein source. I eat it out of the jar it taste good and is cheap. Also helps build the mass if u excercise. If not . It will make u gain weight not muscle
When you heat matter, it does not increase its mass. Heating matter can cause changes in temperature, density, and volume, but mass remains constant unless there is a chemical reaction or nuclear process involved.