Whopper V Whopper Jr: Weight Difference in 1 Year

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the weight difference between two friends who consume significantly different calorie amounts at Burger King: one friend consumes 1,600 calories daily while the other consumes 800 calories. The key equation referenced is the energy-to-mass relationship, with a focus on the conversion of calories to kilograms, noting that 7,709 calories equate to 1 kilogram of fat. Participants also mention that a daily caloric deficit can lead to weight loss, with a rough estimate that fasting for four days results in a loss of about 1 kilogram. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding caloric intake and its impact on weight over time. Ultimately, the weight difference after one year would be substantial due to the daily caloric surplus of the first friend.
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Homework Statement


Consider two friends who go to Burger King every day for lunch. One of them orders a double whopper sandwich large fries and a large coke (total cal = 1600) while the other orders a whopper junior small fries and a small coke every day (cal = 800).
if these two friends are very similar otherwise and they have the same metabolic rate, determine the weight difference between these two friends in a year.


Homework Equations


I know of know no other equation that relates energy to mass besides this one.
Does it apply here?
E=mc^2
 
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haha I've never heard of such a question. one calorie is 4.184 joules according to google. that's oddly close to the specific heat capacity of water, off topic sorry.

and yeah that's what I would do. what are you studying right now in physics, relativity? energy?
 
however, that cannot be right. c^2 is like 9e18...which would mean you could eat like thousands of trillions of calories more and not even gain a kilogram.
 
sorry for the multiple posts, I just found this little statistic here on yahoo answers

7709 cal = 1 Kg
 
One calorie here is actually one Kcal and thus 4.184 kilo joules. The "kilo" is omitted by the food industry and dieticians.

Hint: What is the energy content of one kg of fat?
 
dacruick said:
sorry for the multiple posts, I just found this little statistic here on yahoo answers

7709 cal = 1 Kg

Yes, that looks plausible, A rule of thumb is that 4 days of fasting will lead to about 1 kg of weight loss. We use about 2000 kcal of energy per day, but if you don't eat, then it will be a bit less.
 
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