They are called thermal insulators or materials with high thermal resistance.
Water has the highest specific heat capacity, 1 calorie per gram per degreeC
steel
Warm slowly
it is called conductivity if it is carrying electric it is electrical conductivity. If it is carrying Heat it is thermal conductivity.
Yes. Everything conducts heat. However, as a gas hydrogen does not conduct heat very well. Heat is distributed more by convection.
No. it does not
Yes. Caesium is a metal, all metals conduct heat and electricity quite well.
conduct electricity, conduct heat, melt
Materials that can conduct heat are called good conductors of heat and electricity. Most of the time, these materials are metals. Nonmetals are not good conductors of heat.
the materials like metal(which have free electrons) conduct heat and light both and those materials which are formed by covalent bond (do not have free electrons) generaly non metals do not conduct heat and electricity.
No, a conductor (of heat) will conduct heat more efficiently than an insulator.
copper, metals...
All materials conduct heat so: Yes The real question is how quickly.
Insulators do not conduct heat and are therefore non-metals. Metals do conduct heat, and vey well may i add. But, for the record, you're thinking of electricity. Potatoes conduct heat, and they're not metals. Anyone who has held a lump in their hand will tell you that playdough conducts heat, in fact, rather a lot of other materials conduct heat and water also conduct heat
Usually, yes.
The general term for "materials that conduct heat poorly" is "insulators". Examples would be wood, many ceramics, and cloth such as wool or cotton.
Mostly because of blood flow ... a dead (human) body does conduct heat (because its mostly water), but quite slowly.
Conductors. It's a common property of metals, the ability to conduct heat, and electricity.
Any material that has free electrons.
The best conductor for heat and electricity is any type of metal element.