Conduction.
Iron conducts both heat and electricity very well.
The temperature of the solid iron rod will depend on its surroundings and any heat sources or cooling mechanisms that may be affecting it. In general, the temperature of a solid iron rod will be the same as its surroundings if it has reached thermal equilibrium. However, if there are heat sources or cooling mechanisms in the vicinity, the temperature of the rod may differ.
A rod that is made out of iron.
Does iron warm up when you heat it? Yes, yes it does.
An iron would why because an iron is a type of metal and metal heats up quickly
Conduction.
Iron conducts both heat and electricity very well.
Iron conducts heat better than other metals so it heats up the potato faster.
Iron rod is the good conductor of heat first of all it receives heat and after sometime paper gets heated and catches fire
The temperature of the solid iron rod will depend on its surroundings and any heat sources or cooling mechanisms that may be affecting it. In general, the temperature of a solid iron rod will be the same as its surroundings if it has reached thermal equilibrium. However, if there are heat sources or cooling mechanisms in the vicinity, the temperature of the rod may differ.
Because the hot water heat transfers into the rod.
iron rod
If you introduce the rod with the round strips into the flame of a candle, the paper will not catch fire. The fire will lick the paper but not burn down until the iron rod becomes hot. This is because iron rod just like any other metal is a good conductor of heat, it leads away the heat obtained by paper from the candle flames. Replace the iron rod by a wooden stick and paper will burn because wood is a poor conductor of heat. With copper rod the experiment is more successful.
A rod that is made out of iron.
Does iron warm up when you heat it? Yes, yes it does.
Iron has the lowest specific heat, so it will heat up faster.