cold objects do have heat energy.
Thermal energy moves spontaneously from hot to cold objects.
Thermal energy, or heat energy, is a form of energy and a way that heat transfers energy from hot objects to cold objects.
heat dosent travel from cold objects to hot objects ,it only travels fron hot to cold objects
Because molecules in matter are always moving, virtually all matter has some heat energy, even when it seems cold to you. Matter that seems cold is merely not as hot as objects near it, or as hot as your hand. It still has temperature and thus heat energy. As long as its temperature is above -459.7°, it has heat energy.
when two cold objects are rubbed against with each other...
Thermal energy moves spontaneously from hot to cold objects.
energy is heat so more than cold objects
Thermal energy, or heat energy, is a form of energy and a way that heat transfers energy from hot objects to cold objects.
heat dosent travel from cold objects to hot objects ,it only travels fron hot to cold objects
Because molecules in matter are always moving, virtually all matter has some heat energy, even when it seems cold to you. Matter that seems cold is merely not as hot as objects near it, or as hot as your hand. It still has temperature and thus heat energy. As long as its temperature is above -459.7°, it has heat energy.
Yes, it still has some amount of internal energy or "heat". Even considering the coldest objects in the universe, it is still impossible for an object to have no heat, and this theoretical state is known as absolute zero.
by all the condensation, Inproved: If you are talking about objects the heat wants to move to the colder places (thats why we get cold in winter) and the particles that are hot pass on the heat energy (thermal energy) to the particles ajecent to it wich then pass on that heat energy and onwards. Hope it helps! Harriet
In a closed system, yes. Both objects will be at the same thermal energy level, and neither will be able to release any to the other. In the real world, this is not the case, heat would continue to dissipate until the object reaches the same thermal energy level as the air around it, approximately.
Heat energy is transferred from warmer objects to cooler objects.
when two cold objects are rubbed against with each other...
From the warmer object to the colder one. page 482 in the textbook, under the soup!
Technically the answer to your question is no. Heat does indeed flow between objects, but cold does not because it doesn't really physically exist. "Cold" is just a lower level of heat.