To determine the specific heat capacity of the metal, we can use the formula for heat transfer in a calorimetry experiment:Q = mcTwhere Q is the heat transfer, m is the mass, c is the specific heat capacity, and T is the change in temperature.Since the heat gained by the water is equal to the heat lost by the metal, we can set up the following equation:Q_water = Q_metalFor water, the specific heat capacity c_water is 4.18 J/gC. The mass of the water m_water can be assumed to be equal to its volume in milliliters, so m_water = 50 g. The change in temperature for water T_water is the final temperature minus the initial temperature: 30C - 25C = 5C.For the metal, we have the mass m_metal as 100 g, and we need to find the specific heat capacity c_metal . The change in temperature for the metal T_metal is the initial temperature minus the final temperature: 100C - 30C = 70C.Now we can set up the equation:m_water * c_water * T_water = m_metal * c_metal * T_metalPlugging in the values: 50 g * 4.18 J/gC * 5C = 100 g * c_metal * 70C Solving for c_metal: 50 * 4.18 * 5 / 100 * 70 = c_metalc_metal 0.149 J/gCThe specific heat capacity of the unknown metal is approximately 0.149 J/gC.