yes because thermal is heat
There is no opposite of thermal energy.Thermal energy is energy that comes from heat, and therefore comparable to temperature. There is no "opposite of temperature," and there is no "opposite of thermal energy."If an object has high thermal energy, it is hot. The opposite of that would be having low thermal energy, or being cold.
plastic
The suffix for thermal energy is "ies" as in "energies". The word "thermal" is derived from German. Thus the suffix for thermal is "en" as in "thermalen".
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.
The Sun HAS lots of thermal energy, if that's what you mean.
If you mean "thermal conductivity", no; metals are generally fairly good heat conductors.
Red on a thermal camera means a source of heat is in view of a lense
There are many forms - what one do you mean in particular?
Is the amout of energy, in a thermal deduction.
Yes, it does.
nope! :)
A thermal conductor allows heat to readily flow through itself. An example of a material with a low thermal conductivity would be air, and an example of a material with a high thermal conductivity would be steel.
something scientific to do with thermal decomposition
heat technology a.k.a thermometer
Geothermal breaks up to form "Geo" and "thermal". This means different. Geo is earth and thermal is heat. So it means different when it breaks up.
If an object appears blue on a thermal camera, the object does not have a significant heat source within it