hi its heat
Thermal energy poorly and slowly transfers in liquids
This question requires a context. Thermal energy exists everywhere. But in general, too much thermal energy leads to overheating.
The answer is heat engine.
Thermal energy
Cooling and freezing.
There are different types of thermal energy like conduction, convection, and radiation. But the one that requires objects to touch is conduction.
Sound.
The moving of hands requires mechanical energy.
From least thermal energy to most: solid, liquid, gas. In solids, particles are closely packed and have the least amount of thermal energy. Liquids have more thermal energy than solids because their particles can flow and move around. Gases have the most thermal energy as their particles move freely and rapidly.
The gas begins to cool down, and lose thermal energy, and moves up in the ladder of the 3 states of matter. Gasses condense into liquids, liquids turn into solids. The higher up you go, the less thermal energy the object has.
In gases and liquids, thermal energy is transferred through a process known as convection. This involves the movement of the molecules within the substance, transferring heat from one region to another. Warmer, less dense regions rise, while cooler, denser regions sink, creating a circulation pattern that transfers thermal energy.