Solids have thermal energy because all objects have thermal energy.
because every thing has heat capacity.
All materials have thermal properties.
Mainly by conduction.
The only way thermal heat can travel through a solid object is by conduction.
Yes, the free electrons in metals are responsible for the high thermal conductivity.
Because in solids the positions of the smallest components (atoms or molecules) are fixed relative to each other. There is therefore no possibility of heat transfer by convection. The only modes available to a solid are thermal vibration interactions and thermal radiation.
Solids have the least, then liquids, then gases. This is because a lot of thermal energy is required to break the intermolecular forces holding substances together, In a solid, the bonds are strong, however thermal energy is used to patrially break these bonds, melting the solid. The liquid then needs further thermal energy to completely break these bonds to form gases
"Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat"."Thermal energy" or "heat".
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.
The thermal energy.The thermal energy.The thermal energy.The thermal energy.
Plasma's are the most energetic states we have discovered but the answer you are probably looking for is when the matter is in a gaseous state, that is when the atoms have dissociated from each other almost completely. But in plasma the particles that make up an atom have dissociated.
I'd like to know who told you that so that I can beat them severely about the head and shoulders with a wet noodle. It's not true.
The movement of heat through a solid is called heat conduction.