Heat always moves from the warmer object to the colder object.
Temperature is a measure of particle movement. An increase of temperature, in a sense is an increase of the average movement of the particles within the substance, to include vibrations, spins, and lateral movement.
Heat always moves from the warmer object to the colder object.
Heat does not affect it. It expands with coolness. It contracts with heat.
* Air temperature * Humidity * Radiant Heat (direct heat radiating from an object such as an oven or even the sun) * Air Velocity
they are different. temperature is the movement of particles. heat is the movement of temperature from place to place. temperature are the moving particles, heat is the movement of those particles from a place to a place.
Thermal energy is not light. It is heat! Energy of heat and temperature of matter (more heat=more thermal energy=more movement of molecules) Temperature measures movement of molecules
Heat.
Changing the temperature can affect the fluidity and movement of molecules within the chloroplast membranes. Extreme temperatures can denature proteins involved in chloroplast movement, leading to impaired function and reduced movement. Additionally, temperature changes can affect enzyme activity within the chloroplasts, influencing their overall metabolic processes and movement.
Yes, it does.
Yes, temperature difference does affect heat transfer rate. The greater the temperature difference between two objects, the faster heat will transfer between them. This is described by Newton's Law of Cooling, where the rate of heat transfer is directly proportional to the temperature difference.
heat
yes