deshon burgess is a knob head
The transfer of heat from cup to hand is known as conduction.
Dissolve... mixing with the tea.
I believe as the tea is in contact with the spoon, the molecules in the spoon start moving around as they are heating up, causing the spoon to become hot.
First note that "thermal energy" is a term that became obsolete about 200 years ago. The correct term is "Internal Energy". "Thermal energy" was a term that was in use when people thought of energy as being some kind of fluid called "caloric" that was transferred between things at different temperatures.Because the pitcher of juice almost certainly has much more mass than a cup of some hot beverage, we would expect it to have more internal energy.
a piece of poo
Correct, the total thermal energy in a cup and a pot of tea at the same temperature would be the same. However, the pot of tea would have more thermal energy per unit volume compared to the cup, as it contains more tea.
coffee
The Jasmine tea box I have says 3 grams makes a cup so I'm guessing 1/3 cup of tea. :)
Yes, the thermal energy in a cup of tea and a pot of tea at the same temperature would be the same, assuming they contain the same amount of liquid. Thermal energy depends on temperature and quantity of substance.
glass
when you put tea in the cup, you then put the cup on the saucer to prevent tea from spilling onto the table or to protect the table from the cup. And it makes carrying the cup a lot easier. try tea with biscuits for an english touch :)
It has a much higher volume of water compared to the tea cup. It takes less energy to heat a small amount of liquid such as a tea cup.
The energy in a cup of tea is transferred into the blood flow to provide a low energy source to your body for movement; like exercise so you can stay exercising for longer.
He has a cup of tea.
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
Stirring makes it faster for the sugar to completely dissolve in the tea.
Makes it sweeter in taste