No. Mass does not increase as heat is applied. Mass is the amount of matter in a body and cannot be changed by any physical or chemical process. Volume will increase when heat is applied.
Heat goes up
Heat dissipation = (applied voltage)2 / total effective resistance of the circuit
volume
because oil has fat in it so its heat quicker and water has no fat i do catering
it melts
When too much heat is applied during the heat fixing of a slide with a bacterial cell on it, the cell would explode. The membrane of the cell would rupture.
Heat must have to be applied to the ice cube.
differentiate luminous flame from non-luminous flame
No. Mass does not increase as heat is applied. Mass is the amount of matter in a body and cannot be changed by any physical or chemical process. Volume will increase when heat is applied.
The density of a fluid goes down (becomes less dense) when heat is applied.
Heat goes up
In effect it does. Electricity applied to the heater produces heat. Heat applied to the thermocouple produces electricity.
They're two totally different tests. The alcohol emulsion test is for fat, and it works because water and oil don't mix. The reaction in the Benedict's test requires heat to work.
Heat dissipation = (applied voltage)2 / total effective resistance of the circuit
you get fat
volume