An "ice calorimeter" can be used to determine the specific heat capacity of a metal. A piece of hot metal is dropped onto a weighed quantity of ice. The energy transferred from the metal to the ice can be determined from the amount of ice melted. Suppose you heated a 63.0 g piece of silver to 99.5 °C and then dropped it onto ice. When the metal's temperature had dropped to 0.0 °C, it is found that 4.44 g of ice had melted. What is the specific heat capacity of silver? (The heat of fusion of water is 333 J/g.)
Specific heat capacity = J/g · K