Water doesn't GAIN but LOSS thermal energy when it gets a lower temperature: that's what 'temperature is all about!!
It gets warmer.
Hydrothermal energy is generated through the earth's hot water. The water is produced underground, and heated by the earth's thermal heat.
Thermal to kinetic when it boils
No, the thermal energy of any object is a multiple of its temperature (absolute), the specific heat of the material it is made of, and the mass of the material. So obviously a large pot contains more energy than a small one.
The evaporation and vaporization of water is an endothermic process. As water vaporizes it absorbs heat energy. The changing of phase from liquid water to gas also means an increase in kinetic energy.
Water has a high heat capacity, which can be described as "thermal inertia". That means that water can absorb a large amount of heat energy.
In general, when a hot object comes in contact with a cold object, heat (thermal energy) is transferred from the hotter to the colder object.
by the way the steam condenses back to water
thermal
Thermal energy in the water is transferred to the air in the freezer, mainly by convection. From there, it is absorbed by the evaporator coils which line the interior of the freezer; the refrigerant fluid in the coils circulates to the outside, where it is compressed and the heat is dissipated into the room as it passes through the condenser coils on the outside of the freezer.
Most of it will end up in the water It travels through the water.
A 12 ounce glass of water at 70 degrees has more thermal energy than a 12 ounce glass of water at 60 degrees.Adding ice to a glass of water causes the temperature of the water to decrease because the thermal energy in the water causes the ice to melt.A grill gives off thermal energy by burning propane.The sun's thermal energy heats our atmosphere.Thermal energy from a hot stove is transferred to a metal pot and causes the water molecules to move faster increasing the temperature of the water.
Thermal energy is the internal energy of a system in thermodynamic equilibrium by virtue of its temperature. A hot body has more thermal energy than a similar cold body, but a large tub of cold water may have more thermal energy than a cup of boiling water. Thermal energy can be transferred from one body, usually hotter, to a second body, usually colder, in three ways: conduction , convection, and radiation. Insulator
When water has heat and energy it changes energy. The energy that it changes to is called thermal.
It will either get hotter or evaporate, or perhaps a bit of both.
Since hot water is less dense that cold air the hot water will rise and the cold would sink then it keeps doing this in a circular motion 'till the thermal energy reaches to thermal equilibrium.
Chemical energy released by burning the fuel with oxygen produces thermal energy, which is transferred to water/steam as thermal energy, which then produces mechanical energy in the turbine. This drives the generator to produce electrical energy.
heat