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Yes because it repells
the movement of energy from a warmer object to a cooler object is called heat transfer
Yes, the hotter an object is, the greater the thermal energy it has.
The thermal energy of an object consists of the total kinetic energy of all its atoms and molecules. The temperature of the object is a measured average intensity of its thermal energy.
thermal equilibrium
The sum of the kinetic and potential energy of all the molecules in an object is the thermal energy
The sum of the kinetic and potential energy of all the molecules in an object is the thermal energy
Any object that is above zero Kelvin - in other words, any object - contains thermal energy. As a simplified explanation, the thermal energy is contained in the movement of its atoms.
yes the both are related because they both has energy and they are moving by object
the amount of inertia in an object
Yes because it repells
the movement of energy from a warmer object to a cooler object is called heat transfer
Heat is thermal energy moving from a warmer object to a cooler object.
No, an object will not be a net radiator of energy when its thermal energy is less than that of its surroundings. In this case, the object will instead absorb thermal energy from its surroundings in an attempt to reach thermal equilibrium.
Yes, the hotter an object is, the greater the thermal energy it has.
"Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat".
The thermal energy of an object consists of the total kinetic energy of all its atoms and molecules. The temperature of the object is a measured average intensity of its thermal energy.