Temperature is a sensible heat measurement readable on a thermometer, measured in degrees. Thermal energy is the heat content of a material measured in heat units, often btus, calories, or kilogram-joules.
temperatures differ from thermal energy because differ because thermal energy is the total energy of all particles in an object and temperature is a measure of the average energy of random motion of particles of matter.
Heat is not the transfer of thermal energy. Heat is the thermal energy. What drives itacross a boundary between substances or objects is a difference in their temperatures.
0 Kelvin is the lowest temperature possible. At this temprature, atoms and molecules have no thermal energy.
thermal energy is energy in the form of heat.
the basic thermal parameter are pressure(P), volume(V), and temprature(T).
triple-k@mocospace.com add me lol
All objects are made up of atoms. The atoms of all the objects vibrate constantly due to the thermal energy they have. As the temperature goes on decreasing, this thermal energy also goes on decreasing. At -273 degree celsius (0 Kelvin), this thermal energy becomes absolutely nil, and hence there is no vibration of atoms. Thus the object is said to be void of any thermal energy at this temprature.
Yes, it is.
"Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat".
The thermal energy.The thermal energy.The thermal energy.The thermal energy.
There is no particular difference between heat and thermal energy. Heat is a form of thermal energy. Since thermal energy is energy from heat, heat and thermal energy are basically the same thing.
Heat is a transfer of thermal energy.