One obvious example would be cooking food.
One obvious example would be cooking food.
Only if you're referring to an electric heater ... since all loses are also heat. The real world answer is no.
haii
in the real world
SCIENCE!
radiation is heat transfer through light (both visible and not). with a nuclear bomb, surrounding distant flammeables combust because of irradiated infrared energy. conduction is heat transfer through direct contact. a pot on the stove gets heated by the flame that touches it. convection is heat transfer through a medium (really really slow).
Understanding heat is crucial in various real-world applications. For example, in engineering, knowledge of heat transfer is used to design efficient cooling systems for electronics. In medicine, heat therapy is used to treat muscle injuries. Additionally, in cooking, understanding heat helps in determining the right temperature and cooking time for different dishes.
In transient heat transfer, the rate of heat transfer is changing with time. By definition, in steady-state heat transfer, the rate of heat transfer does NOT change with time. In the real world, heat transfer starts out as transient and then approaches steady-state with time until the difference between the actual and the ideal becomes negligible or until thermal equilibrium is approached.
i think it means that when organazaton
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Elevators are an example of an Atwood machine.
selling insurance owning a casino