The best material is copper of alumninium.
absorb or release small amounts of heat, changing its temperature dramatically.
With water been about to absorb heat water is a major plus for industries. It can go in your cars radiator for cooling the heat of the water also helps regulate the air changing temperature.
Yes - like pretty much all matter, orange peels can absorb heat. If you take an orange out of the refrigerator and leave it on the counter for a few hours you will notice that it is no longer cold; the peel (and the rest of the orange) absorbed heat from the counter and the air in the room.
true
A material that does not conduct heat very well is known as an insulator. For practical purposes, air is an excellent insulator, and thus fluffy porous materials are good insulators. In detail, the material should be compressed to the point where the heat transfer through conduction along the fibres of the material; is equal to that transferred by convection in the air cells. Both more compression and less compression of the material will degrade the performance.
Glass traps solar heat. Greenhouses are made of glass so they absorb heat for the plants.
Water absorb heat from sun. it releases heat into the air.
Heat will flow from the coolant to the air The coolant will absorb the heat from the building.
Air absorbs heat as does any other substance. The heat is absorbed into increasing kinetic energy of the particles that make up air.
Heat will flow from the coolant to the air The coolant will absorb the heat from the building.
Heat will flow from the coolant to the air The coolant will absorb the heat from the building.
heat and air (oxygen, carbon dioxide)
Usually, stuff that is soft will absorb sound.answ2. Sound is a vibration of air molecules, and anything that may be made to absorb energy from the molecules will absorb sound. If the material has soft fibres, and can allow the sound to penetrate easily, (is porous) then the collision of sound molecules with the fibres, will transfer the energy from the molecules to the inelastic fibres, where it will be dissipated as heat.
absorb or release small amounts of heat, changing its temperature dramatically.
No, but they dissipate it ... they get warm, andthe surrounding air carries heat away.
Air will only absorb heat from a body if it is at a lower temperature. Being an insulator does not mean that something will not absorb heat, it just means that heat moves through it slowly. Since air has such a low density, the molecules in it are widely spaced compared to a liquid or solid and conduction of heat through the air is very slow since the molecules do not collide nearly as frequently as they do in more dense materials.
With water been about to absorb heat water is a major plus for industries. It can go in your cars radiator for cooling the heat of the water also helps regulate the air changing temperature.