it is still hot but lying on the ground! :D
What will happen is that when you touch the hot object the nervous system will send a signal to the brain which will make you react to the hot object and that is what happen when you touch the hot object . Example : a hot stove , a hot light bud, the seat in the summer which is like burning your bum ,and that are some example for hot object...or it will hurt alot
Because the temperature of the object is lower than the temperature of the water. When the object is sunk, the water temperature drops below boiling.
The object is white hot.
If there is any kind of conducting path, then heat energy flows from the hot object to the cold object, until their temperatures are equal. (The final temperature is not necessarily ... in fact in general it's rarely ... midway between the two initial temperatures.)
Yes, a small hot object can contain less total energy than a larger cooler object because the temperature of an object is not solely determined by its size but also by its mass and specific heat capacity. So, even though the small hot object may have a higher temperature, the larger cooler object can still contain more energy overall.
it means you like somebody
When you touch a hot object, the atoms in your skin absorb the heat energy from the object, causing them to vibrate faster and increasing their temperature. This can trigger pain receptors in your skin, sending signals to your brain that the object is hot and prompting you to pull away to prevent burning.
Heat transfer occurs from the hotter object to the cooler object until thermal equilibrium is reached. The hotter object will cool down while the cooler object will heat up until both objects reach the same temperature.
Heat will transfer from the hot object to the cooler one through a process known as conduction. As the heat flows, the temperature gradient between the two objects will decrease until an equilibrium temperature is reached.
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.
transfer heat energy from the hot object to the cool object until they reach thermal equilibrium.
What term describes how hot or cold an object is?