Because thermal energy travels from hotter objects to colder objects.
25degres celsius has more thermal energy
You will lose thermal energy.Heat (energy) will always flow from warmer to cooler.
The amount of thermal energy a substance has is proportional to its temperature
yes it does
Heat will naturally flow from hotter objects to colder objects. If heat flows OUT OF your body, you will LOSE that heat energy (thermal energy).
Your body would gain thermal energy because thermal energy only moves from something at a higher temperature to something at a lower temperature.
Temperature is what is used to measure thermal energy The more thermal energy a substance has, the more warmer it will be. So when the temperature is high, there is a lot of thermal energy Thermal energy is just energy. It refers to the energy of the molecules. Temperature is just a measurement
They are not the same. "Thermal energy" is the same as "heat".
we use thermal energy by measuring temperature
If you increase temperature you increase thermal energy.If you double the amount you have the temperature does not change but the thermal energy does.Temperature and thermal energy are the same since they both use kinetic energy. Temperature uses the thermal energy when the heat measures the average of the kinetic energy. The thermal energy uses the kinetic energy, when it's averged together with the kinetic enery and the others to make the thermal energy.==========================Answer #2:Wow !Temperature is to thermal energy as depth is to water.
Temperature is what is used to measure thermal energy The more thermal energy a substance has, the more warmer it will be. So when the temperature is high, there is a lot of thermal energy Thermal energy is just energy. It refers to the energy of the molecules. Temperature is just a measurement
The thermal energy of a solid or a volume of liquid is the specific heat of a material multiplied by the object's mass and temperature (absolute). I.E. 1 kg of water at 27 degrees C: specific heat of water is 4.186 Kilojoules per kilogram-degree Celsius. Multiply that by the mass and the absolute temperature (Degrees Kelvin, or 273.15 + degrees Celsius) to get the thermal energy in kilojoules