Because like any heated food, it starts to cool when removed from the stove.
Into the ice-cream because heat always flows from hot to cold. Therefore, the ice-cream will take heat in from its surrounding.
out of it
Don't no
through radiation
Heat always travels from areas of higher temperature to areas of lower temperature. the surface and sides of a container of soup are generally at a lower temperature than the interior of the soup. Of course you may still get some additional heat transfer via convection if the surface is cooler than the soup deeper in the container.
Warm things generally expand and take up more room. If you heat it to boiling, some of the water turns to steam, which expands greatly.
Convection currents. This means that the soup that is heated moves away from the heat, and the cool soup flows over heat so that warms up
A cold spoon will extract heat from the soup, a spoon that is warmer than the soup will transfer heat to it.
Endothermic, the soup is taking in heat to boil.
Soup
No. It is a noun: "You've still got your soup on the heat."And a verb: "You still need to heat up your soup."But not an adverb; that modifies a verb, and adjective, or another adverb.
No, heat does not flow indefinitely. Heat stops flowing the temperatures are equal.
Heat flow's from cooler objects.
Apparently No, heat flow in oceanic crust is higher than continental crust
A commercial soup kettle will only keep product warm once hot as you would be waiting a whole day for it to heat product from cold and it would still only be lukewarm