It will soften, melt and burn
Rubber is a excellent insulator of heat. The amount of hydrogen it is giving to keep track of heat. though if you are doing a science fair project, the amount of heat is excelled by the power of rubber
no
There are lots of different chemicals. Some chemicals would have no effect on rubber, some chemicals would destroy rubber, and some chemicals would have various other effects on rubber.
heat is treated as a reactant or product
smd
Humidity really has no effect on the strength of rubber bands, but temperature does. Heat and cold affects the structure, strength, and elasticity of rubber bands.
Rubber is an insulator, so lightning cannot effect rubber shoes.
which of these is the best conductor of heat? rubber , stainless steel , plastic , cloth
When a rubber band is exposed to heat it contracts heat, meaning that sucks up all the heat and becomes smaller.
Rubber is a excellent insulator of heat. The amount of hydrogen it is giving to keep track of heat. though if you are doing a science fair project, the amount of heat is excelled by the power of rubber
Well, cold rubber balls do bounce, but warm rubber balls bounce better because when a cold rubber ball hits the floor, it generates heat instead of a rebound effect because the molecules are so close together that they collide with each other.
On heating rubber contracts instead of expanding
about the cause and effect of tides
No because rubber is an insulator!
Rubber can not only keep heat OUT, it can also keep heat IN. It only depends on which side of it is initially at higher temperature. This property of rubber is the main reason that it is often used as a thermal insulator.
The type of 'effect' you have in mind isn't clear. -- Rubber is commonly used where electrical insulation is needed, so it's pretty certain that you're not going to encounter a case where rubber is conducting current. -- If you put a piece of rubber in an electric toaster, it will definitely burn. But that's not the effect of the electricity. It's the effect of the heat developed by dissipating the energy of an electric current. -- Electricity will not make rubber jump down, spin around, glow, vibrate, communicate, hum, ionize, or become magnetic. So I would say that electricity does not affect rubber. I could be wrong.
It is possible to heat anything.