faster
It causes it to vibrate which causes it to heat up
when a balloon is filled up with air and then heated. remember that the particles of air are free to move. so when it is heated the particles will gain more energy and they stars to move faster. when there is too much energy between the particles they escape by popping the balloon. the more heat the more faster the particles move. it wil be the same process if the ballon is filled up with water and then heated.(water and air particles are heated up by convection currents.) if you heat just a ballon then the ballon will melt because of the property of the meterial it is made of. hope i helped:)
When energy is transfered to a system of particles, the system is said to be heated. The particles absorb this energy and convert it to kinetic energy, causing their translational motions to increase. Temperature is a measure of the average translational motion of particles. Hence, heating an object causes the particles that make up that object to move more and these motions manifest themselves in what we know as the temperature of the object. In fact in the absolute temperature scale of thermodynamics a zero temperature corresponds to a system of particles in which there is no motion.
They speed up. Heat is actually molecular motion. Absolute zero (−459.67°F) is the temperature where the particles have no motion at all.
hot water flows through the meta pipes and warms it up therefore warming up the room .
Heat is the average kinetic energy of something. When you increase the heat, you make the particles in the substance move faster. It would be more correct to say that particles moving in a liquid (or any substance rather) cause heat. So increasing heat causes particles in a liquid to move faster. Hope that helps.
Any object consists of particles. In a solid they are close together and do not move much. In a liquid the particles can move more freely past each other as they have more heat energy. In a gas the heat energy is largest and the particles move fastest. By heating any object we add heat energy to it. This speeds up the particle movement as the energy increases. It also expands the bonds between the particles and, if this goes far enough, the object changes state. (Ice melts when heated from solid to liquid)
It causes it to vibrate which causes it to heat up
well heat is fast moving particles they collide with slow particles which is cold and the slow particles move fast too. In the end the slow particles move faster just as heat so they are not cold anymore.
Temperature IS the average speed of movement of the particles molecules that make up an object. The more heat you add to an object, the faster the molecules move vibrate. There are devices thermometers that indirectly measure this speed, and thus report the temperature.
convection-moves heat particles around in a circle
No: Upon being heated, the average kinetic energy of the particles that compose the object increases.
Temperature IS the (average) speed of movement of the particles (molecules) that make up an object. The more heat you add to an object, the faster the molecules move (vibrate). There are devices (thermometers) that indirectly measure this speed, and thus report the temperature.
Heat energy makes the particles in matter move faster. The more heat, the faster the particles move.
heat radiation gives an object energy and it begins to vibrate (molecular level) which heats the object. Its like a person jumping around will heat up, works the same with particles in an object
Increase the kinetic energy by heating the object up.
No, heating a liquid makes it's particles move farther apart (makes the liquid expand). This is most readily observed in an old glass thermometer. As your temperature goes up (as you heat the liquid in the thermometer), the liquid inside expands and travels up the thermometer.