radiation
what is the best way to change the sensible heat level of the evaporator
If you already have a forced air system, the heat-pump is not going to change the way you heat your home, it will seamlessly heat your home you just won't be using your main furnace until the heat-pump loses it's efficiency in the 20 degree f range. When it reaches that point you switch to the furnace.
The best way is to remove heat by cooling.
Sedimentary rocks change to metamorphic the same way any other rock would: through heat and pressure.
The two states of heat are latent heat and sensible heat. Latent heat is the heat absorbed or released during a change of phase, such as melting or boiling. Sensible heat is the heat exchange that causes a change in temperature without a change in phase.
The heat that causes a substance to change form is called latent heat. This heat is absorbed or released during a phase change, such as melting, freezing, vaporization, or condensation, without causing a change in temperature.
One way to add heat to a substance without raising its temperature is by changing its state of matter. This process, known as phase change, involves adding heat energy to a substance to change it from a solid to a liquid or from a liquid to a gas. During this phase change, the temperature of the substance remains constant until the phase change is complete.
The opposite of latent heat is sensible heat. Sensible heat is the heat that causes a change in temperature of a substance without a change in phase.
Heat which causes a change in temperature of substance is called specific heat.
Beans change colors while cooking them because of heat. The pigments inside the beans keep changing colors that way. Hope I helped! =)
The heat conductivity of a substance does not involve changes to its chemistry. Heat conductivity is a physical change and characteristic to a substance.
Temperature change, more accurately, a change in heat, is not a chemical change because it does not happen on a chemical level. Heat is the product of varying levels energy, not physically tangible particles. The higher the energy the higher the heat. To clear up any further confusion, a lot of people think heat is a chemical process, but it's not. Most people that think this, do so because the first way most of us imagine this change is through exothermic (reactions that create heat) reactions which are chemical processes like explosions.