If they have been heated then yes
The temperature of wooden or metal spoons depends on the temperature of the environment.
We are back to basic science metal is a conductor and wood is an INSULATOR.
Is the temperature of your body. When is getting warmer your body temperature gets warmer and so you feel the drink colder then before - for a short time because eventually it will get warm too!!!
thermal energyAnswerHeat describes energy in transit between a warmer body to and a cooler body, and is expressed in joules.
This is called "heat transfer"...the answer was in the question! In a thermal gradient, energy (in the form of heat) always wants to go to areas of deficiency. Thus, there is a movement of this energy (which is called "Heat Transfer") from the warmer body to the cooler body.
your body is warmer than a metal or wooden when the spoons aren't heated up but when they are the spoons are warmer
The temperature of wooden or metal spoons depends on the temperature of the environment.
Unless you put the spoon on a hot burner or in a hot oven, yes. You body is warmer than room temperature.
I think its cooler because a kitchen can be very warm due to all the electrical appliances being used included the gas and oven. Also when your in the kitchen working you tend to feel hot. Therefore the body is cooler than the air in the kitchen.
Yes, you are correct. Heat is defined as energy in transit from a warmer body to a cooler body.
false-cooler
Because it is in contact with something colder. When a warmer body is in contact with a cold body, the warmer one will give off heat to the cold one. This cools the warmer one and warms the cooler one.
We are back to basic science metal is a conductor and wood is an INSULATOR.
Is the temperature of your body. When is getting warmer your body temperature gets warmer and so you feel the drink colder then before - for a short time because eventually it will get warm too!!!
thermal energyAnswerHeat describes energy in transit between a warmer body to and a cooler body, and is expressed in joules.
This is called "heat transfer"...the answer was in the question! In a thermal gradient, energy (in the form of heat) always wants to go to areas of deficiency. Thus, there is a movement of this energy (which is called "Heat Transfer") from the warmer body to the cooler body.
In thermodynamics, heat is defined as the energy in transfer between a system and its surroundings. In practice we consider the flow from the higher energy state to the lower energy state. In the case of thermal energy, from the body with the higher thermal energy (warmer) to the body with the lower thermal energy (cooler). In general, however, you may define the flow in either direction you wish, though if you define it as from cooler to warmer, the magnitude would be negative.