If heat can flow between them, then heat flows from the hot one to the cold one.
The temperature of the hot object falls, and the temperature of the cold object
rises. What drives the transfer of heat is the difference in temperature, so as soon
as both objects are at the same temperature, the process stops, and no more heat
is transferred.
Conduction: The heat particles in the hotter object transfer to the colder object. Not the coldness going to the hotter object, but the heat going to the colder object.
It's very likely that heat flows from the hot object to the cold object, and their temperatures
tend asymptotically toward the same number.
The characteristics of freezing is when water (or any other liquid) turns into a solid. This happens when the liquid gets cold and the molecules get closer together. When the molecules get closer together, they form a solid (ice).
which term describes what happens to a cold balloon when placed in a hot car
The wax starts to get hard and cold
Yes, it still has some amount of internal energy or "heat". Even considering the coldest objects in the universe, it is still impossible for an object to have no heat, and this theoretical state is known as absolute zero.
well really it will disslove quicker in warm water but i dont think know if it will in cold water sorry thnx every1
They freeze. Liquid hydrogen is very cold.
You get pregnant.
What could be the temperature of hot objects compared to Cold objects?
cold objects do have heat energy.
heat dosent travel from cold objects to hot objects ,it only travels fron hot to cold objects
A warm front and a cold front must be brought together to form a blizzard
well it gets cold like it has like frozen chips of pop and it is all pushed together andmaking a big chunk of frozen chipped ice chunks and that's what happens when itgets cold
Yes. This often happens with friction. For example, if you rub your hands together, you can feel the heat.
Thermal energy moves spontaneously from hot to cold objects.
same number of atoms theoretically... yet cold objects collect water vapor cold objects shrink and hot objects expand with the exception of water.
The particles in the air come closer together and don't move as much.
If the objects are brought into contact with one another, it's very likely that heat will flow from the hot object into the cold one, and that their respective temperatures will tend asymptotically toward the same value.