Yes, heat is the kinetic energy (the vibration modes) of the atoms and or molecules that make up an object.
kinetic energy
kinetic energy
thermal energy
Thermal Energy. Heat in the substance is measured by temperature. The movement causes it to give off heat. Ex. The TV is on too long. You touch it. It feels warm. The electric energy inside is giving off thermal energy. It's giving off heat.
Yes because it repells
kinetic energy
kinetic energy
thermal energy
Thermal Energy. Heat in the substance is measured by temperature. The movement causes it to give off heat. Ex. The TV is on too long. You touch it. It feels warm. The electric energy inside is giving off thermal energy. It's giving off heat.
Yes because it repells
No, heat ALWAYS travels from hot to cold. It is not actual heat moving, it is energy. The more energy something has, the warmer it feels. For example, when you touch a metal railing on a winter day, it feels cold. That is because your hand has more energy than the rail. The energy from your hand is traveling into the railing to equalize the energy (moving towards equilibrium. The loss of energy in your hand is what gives you the "cold" feeling. Heat/energy NEVER moves from cold to hot.
Heat is the average kinetic energy (or energy of movement) of the atomic or molecular constituents of the substance in question. On the sub-microscopic scale, everything vibrates, and the faster the vibration, the higher the temperature. If you have two objects of the same temperature but one feels hotter than the other, it is because the one that feels hotter is a better conductor of heat. If the heat flows faster, the object will feel hotter.
it feels smooter
a conndom?
tired is how you feels
Texture
Instead of associate a sight to an object they associate how the object feels.