yes.. temperature is a macroscopic property because the temperature of just one unit of a substance is equal to the temperature of the whole body.. it is independent of the quantity of substance!.
Temperature in itself is a macroscopic concept which generally is said to be empirical. However, the process of heat transfer is defined in microscopic concept terms.
its macroscopic property because its measurement or sensor of heat.
Macroscopic elements involves those changes that are observable in the environment.
Thermodynamics is concerned with macroscopic processes
macroscopic characteristics of both forward and reverse reactions
Macroscopic algae is better known as seaweed. An important ecological role that is shared by macroscopic algae is that it helps to clean the sea, prevents erosion and it serves as a food for fish and plankton.
In the scientific sense atleast, the word's usually used as a distinction from microscopic. Microscopic features are observed under a microscope, but macroscopic features are observeable by the human eye.
i think it is a Microsoft windows
temperature
temparature is a microscopic entity as it affects the motion of microscopic particles.
What does macroscopic mean
Boiling temperature makes sense only in macroscopic world. Temperature itself is a macroscopic quantity, However ,by use of kinetic theory one can show that energy of a molecule(microscopic quantity) is proportional to the temperature of the surroundings(macroscopic quantity). Boiling temperature is thus a temperature at which the molecule gains sufficient energy to overcome the coulomb barrier between its molecules of the bulk. Hence boiling temperature of a single water molecule is meaningless ! *********
examples of macroscopic system
A macroscopic cell can be seen without the aid of a microscope.
Macroscopic Observatory was created in 2009.
A germ is microscopic as well as macroscopic.
Macroscopic elements involves those changes that are observable in the environment.
Microscopically, sociology studies the interactions and relationships between individuals and groups within a society, focusing on social norms, institutions, and structures. Macroscopically, sociology examines these interactions on a larger scale, looking at how societal structures, culture, and social institutions impact behavior, beliefs, and relationships within a society as a whole. Sociology seeks to understand and explain social phenomena and patterns by analyzing both the individual and collective aspects of human behavior.
Concept of temperature in single molecules could be explain through statistical thermodynamics and measure the temperature in term of kinetic energy of the molecules. Forclassical thermodynamics, the temperature is macroscopic properties andcan't be explain or describe in the classical scope.