Burning Off" 200 Cal: How High Must Student Climb?

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To burn off a 200-Calorie doughnut, a 100-kg student must climb approximately 854 meters. The calculation involves converting food calories to joules and applying the work-energy principle. The confusion arises from the conversion factor, where 1 food Calorie equals 1,000 small calories, not 103. Although the assumption of 100% efficiency in energy conversion is unrealistic, it is a common simplification in such problems. Ultimately, the correct height to climb is indeed 854 meters.
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Homework Statement



A 100-kg student eats a 200-Calorie doughnut. To "burn it off", he decides to climb the steps of a tall building. How high (in m) would he have to climb to expend an equivalent amount of work? (1 food Calorie = 103 calories.)

Homework Equations



W = Fd

The Attempt at a Solution



d = W/F
= (200 x 103 cal)(4.186 J/cal) / (100kg)(9.8m/s2)
= 87.99m

The solution says its 854m which doesn't make sense to me at all.
 
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I would go with your answer. Running almost a kilometer just burn off 1 donut seems weird.
 
In fact one food calorie = 10^3 =1000 calories, not 103 calories. The 854m is the correct answer. Of course, this assumes that your body is 100% efficient at turning food energy into mechanical energy, which it isn't, but that is probably what you are supposed to assume for this problem.
 
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