yes the heat goes through the bar and ends up through it
William Barthomulule
Heat travels through waves of insulation through metals and other materials. The only metals that heat does not travel through are aluminum and nickel.
Heat travels fastest through materials that are good conductors, such as metals like copper and aluminum. These materials have high thermal conductivity, allowing heat to move quickly through them.
Heat travels by conduction through different materials by transferring kinetic energy from one molecule to another. In metals, heat is conducted through the free electrons between atoms. In non-metals, heat is conducted through vibrations of atoms and molecules.
Heat travels through empty spaces by radiation.
Heat travels through empty spaces by radiation.
Yes, heat and electricity can pass through metals.
How fast heat travels depends upon which method it uses to travel (conduction/ convection/radiation) and what it is travelling through (metal/air/water etc.). heat travels much more quickly through metal because metals are good thermal conductors.
Heat travels from a region of higher temperature to a region of lower temperature.
Light, sound, and heat all move at different rates through different materials. For example, light travels faster through air than through water, sound travels faster through solids than through gases, and heat can be conducted more easily through metals than through wood.
the answer is that it travels by conduction. thank you.
Heat travels through vacuum as electromagnetic radiation, exactly the same way that light and radio do.