Heat is not an internal property of matter (temperature is!), heat is just a way to change the temperature of an object... it is a flow of energy.
Think of it this way, before you study for a physics test you have a certain level of understanding physics. While you read your text book (or wiki answers) you are studying (understanding is flowing into your head) and afterward you (hopefully) have a greater understanding of physics. Although "studying" went into you, you do not have a certain amount of "study" inside of you before or after, you had an amount of understanding.
In that analogy, "studying" represents heat and "understanding of physics" represents temperature. Heat is just a way to change temperature and therefore you cannot say that matter contains heat!
It is incorrect to say that matter contains heat because heat is a form of energy, not a substance that can be contained within matter. When we say that matter is hot, we mean that its particles have a higher kinetic energy, which we perceive as heat.
Heat is not an internal property of matter (temperature is!), heat is just a way to change the temperature of an object... it is a flow of energy.
Think of it this way, before you study for a physics test you have a certain level of understanding physics. While you read your text book (or wiki answers) you are studying (understanding is flowing into your head) and afterward you (hopefully) have a greater understanding of physics. Although "studying" went into you, you do not have a certain amount of "study" inside of you before or after, you had an amount of understanding.
In that analogy, "studying" represents heat and "understanding of physics" represents temperature. Heat is just a way to change temperature and therefore you cannot say that matter contains heat!
Heat is not matter, it is a form of energy.
No, They are two different things
A flame is not a substance like water or air. Rather, it is the result of heat and light energy so you can't really say what state of matter it is in. Think of it like this; asking what state of matter a flame is in would be like asking what state of matter light or heat are in. They are forms of energy, not substances.
When heat is added to matter, it increases the energy of the particles within the matter. This increased energy causes the particles to vibrate and move around more rapidly, resulting in an overall increase in the temperature of the material.
When a material burns, it undergoes a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. The heat produced comes from the energy stored in the chemical bonds of the burning material being released as the bonds break apart. This heat continues to fuel the combustion process, sustaining the flame.
You would say "Qu'est-ce qui ne va pas?" in French to ask "What is the matter?"
This is an incomplete question. You mean to say, "Is fire an exothermic reaction?". Even when the question is phrased this way, it still doesn't make sense. Fire is a product of a reaction, meaning energy (in form of heat) is produced. If fire is being produced, then the reaction that caused the release of heat is the exothermic reaction, not the fire.
It is incorrect to say that an object has heat because heat is not a property that an object possesses; rather, it is the transfer of energy between objects due to a temperature difference. Objects can store thermal energy, but they do not "have" heat in the same way they have mass or volume.
No Matter What - Israel ft Lil Wayne
It would be more accurate to say that microwaves can be converted to heat. A microwave oven is designed speicifically to heat water, or anything that contains water.
To be incorrect is avoir faute
I think you are a little confused, or I'm not understanding your question. All material is matter. So you can't really say something contains matter. You can't really have "types" of matter either. If you can rephrase your question, I can try and help you better. =D
you cannot say "he have" this is incorrect, it is " he has"
It is grammatically incorrect to say sister and sister. You just say sisters.
That's a definition, not a question per-say.
Yes, the correct way to say it is "these." "Ones" is unnecessary in this context.
Yes, and they are also going to win the 2013 championship encore.
A flame is not a substance like water or air. Rather, it is the result of heat and light energy so you can't really say what state of matter it is in. Think of it like this; asking what state of matter a flame is in would be like asking what state of matter light or heat are in. They are forms of energy, not substances.
Even though there is energy in almost anything, air is not usually considered to be a source or storage of energy.Anything solid, liquid, or gaseous has heat energy.Note: It is incorrect to say that air IS energy; rather, it HAS energy, in this case, heat energy.