thermal energy never disappears but, it can be moved from one place to another which what a refrigerator does. on the back of a refrigerator there are heat exchange tubes which get hot as they pump heat from the interior to the exterior of the refrigerator.
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Thermal energy never disappears, but it can be moved from one place to another, which is what a refrigerator does. If you examine your refrigerator you will be able to observe that there are heat exchange tubes (usually on the back) which get hot as they pump heat from the interior to the exterior of the refrigerator.
When thermal energy is added the matter goes slower
It turns into a liquid. Just like if you were to remove thermal energy from a substance the atoms will slow down.
It will get colder. It also might freeze.
They stop moving and stop producing energy.
Thermal energy never disappears, but it can be moved from one place to another, which is what a refrigerator does. If you examine your refrigerator you will be able to observe that there are heat exchange tubes (usually on the back) which get hot as they pump heat from the interior to the exterior of the refrigerator.
Just de frost the refrigerator.
remove access panel in freezer, replace thermostat
When thermal energy is added the matter goes slower
It turns into a liquid. Just like if you were to remove thermal energy from a substance the atoms will slow down.
It will get colder. It also might freeze.
They stop moving and stop producing energy.
A small colony of dwarves are hidden in the posterior portion of your freezer that come out at night with small hammers and chisels to remove the ice.
To fix a commercial refrigerator freezer you need to identify the problem and then unplug the device. For the example of discharging a capacitor you will need to remove the service panel on the appliance and find the component that looks like a large dry cell battery and discharge it with a 20,000 ohm 2-watt resistor.
I would not think so. It has thermal energy though.
Yes. Heat sinks around computer processors are colder than the processors: they "remove" thermal energy from the processors and so stop them from overheating.
conduction