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Direction of heat flux on an isothermal surface is always normal to the surface.
up because heat rises
Heat always moves from the warmer object to the colder object.
from hot to cold
Heat flows from the hotter object to the colder object, unless there is some external process (such as a heat pump) which is transferring the heat in the opposite direction.
no a thermotropic organism grows away from the direction of heat.
thermotrophic means to grow in response of heat, so the answer is yes
it is a thermometer or thermotropic or hyperthermia or hypothermia
Direction of heat flux on an isothermal surface is always normal to the surface.
A scalar quantity has no direction, you cannot talk of north heat, or left heat, or upward heat - they are meaningless. The fact that heat travels in one general direction does not imply a single definite direction - think of a crowd moving along a street - although the crowd may be moving in one direction, the individuals could be moving in any direction within the crowd.
Heat flows towards cold.
up because heat rises
up because heat rises
First of all, heat is thermal energy formed by molecules moving. Heat moves in any direction where it is colder, then balances out the temperature.
First of all, heat is thermal energy formed by molecules moving. Heat moves in any direction where it is colder, then balances out the temperature.
Heat always moves from the warmer object to the colder object.
diagonally.