Heat can make water boil, like when you put a pot of water on the stove on high!
Yes, you can heat a pot of water on the stove and put the container of honey in the pot and wait until it turns back into a liquid.
the boiling point of water is 212 degrees so if the point where a liquid changes to a vapor. If you set a pot with water on a stove and turnon the heat you will notice that after a little while the water starts to bubble . If you have a candy therometer put it in the water , it should read 212 degrees the boiling point of water. Now if you leave the pot on the heat the bubbling will get more intense and you will see steam rising out of the pot and going into the the air above the pot thisis the water turning into a vapor and the surface around the pot will start to get wet. This is vapor that has fallen below 212 degrees and is turning back to a liquid. eventually you will boil all the water in the pot and start to cook the pot and leave scorch marks on it's outsideof the pot and underneath it. which will probally cost you the price of a new pot. but you will notice that the wall behind the stove has little beads of water on it. believe it or not you have made rain.
yes if its boiling yes
Yes. But there are two different qualities of heat transfer. When you talk about the rate of heat transfer, you may be talking about the speed the pot changes temperature or how well it spreads heat. The rate of temperature change is called thermal diffusivity. A copper pot would change temperature about 1.3X faster than an aluminum pot, and 10X faster than an iron pot. How well it spreads the heat is called thermal conductivity. A copper pot would spread the heat about 2X better than an aluminum pot and about 8X better than an iron pot. This is assuming the thickness of each pot is the same. The ability of heat to pass through the pot, is also thermal conductivity. For some things you'd want a pot that transfers heat evenly and quickly, copper. For other things you'd want a pot that holds the heat, iron.
On an electric stove, the heat coil directly touches the pot, facilitating the conduction or direct heat transfer. On a gas stove, the burning fuel transfers heat to a pot by both radiation and convection.
As the stove heats up the pot, heat is transferred from the pot to the water through conduction. Within the pot, heat is transferred through convection from the hot water molecules to the cold ones.
A pot handle on a stove
Heating a pot over a stove is an example of conduction heat. However, roasting a marshmallow near a heat source such as a campfire is an example of radiation heat.
put the doctor pepper in a pot and boil in on the stove
It is conduction that will transfer heat from a cooking pot to the handle.
Boiling a pot of water on the stove. The heat couldn't reach the water if it were not conducted through the metal pot.
conduction
A stove and a copper pot
A pot of water heating on a stove.
Convection is used whenever it is necessary to heat a pot of water on the stove.
it is conduction