(75'C)x(1g) < (75'C)x(100g) .'. The second option has more thermal energy.
100
Hydrothermal energy is generated through the earth's hot water. The water is produced underground, and heated by the earth's thermal heat.
Thermal to kinetic when it boils
No, the thermal energy of any object is a multiple of its temperature (absolute), the specific heat of the material it is made of, and the mass of the material. So obviously a large pot contains more energy than a small one.
The evaporation and vaporization of water is an endothermic process. As water vaporizes it absorbs heat energy. The changing of phase from liquid water to gas also means an increase in kinetic energy.
Water has a high heat capacity, which can be described as "thermal inertia". That means that water can absorb a large amount of heat energy.
Ice. For 6 gr of water and 8 deg C you need 6 x 8 = 48 calories For 5 gr of ice and 20 deg C you need at least 100 ( 5 x 20) if we neglect small difference in the specific heat of ice versus water. If the ice melts then you need additional thermal energy to break the hydrogen bonds in ice (melting thermal energy) so it is even more.
A 12 ounce glass of water at 70 degrees has more thermal energy than a 12 ounce glass of water at 60 degrees.Adding ice to a glass of water causes the temperature of the water to decrease because the thermal energy in the water causes the ice to melt.A grill gives off thermal energy by burning propane.The sun's thermal energy heats our atmosphere.Thermal energy from a hot stove is transferred to a metal pot and causes the water molecules to move faster increasing the temperature of the water.
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
That happens when there is a phase transition; for example, when ice melts, it takes energy to convert ice at zero degrees, to water at zero degrees.
Oceanic thermal energy is the heat energy that is stored by the water in the ocean.
Yes. When ice is converted to water, thermal energy is required. When the water is converted back to ice, the same amount of thermal energy is released.
No, water releases thermal energy during condensation. It absorbs thermal energy during evaporation, which is why the evaporation of sweat cools your skin.
Ocean thermal energy requires close to 40 degrees Fahrenheit difference of water temperature all year round. Also construction of laying pipes can cause damage to the eco system
I don't think you actually put calories into the water. You would dissipate thermal energy that could be measured in kCal or calories to heat the water. You may be thinking of the stored thermal energy from the heated water.
No, it can't have the same thermal energy. The hot water loses energy to the surroundings. Cold is an absence of energy, as energy is removed the water becomes cold.
Thermal Thermal
you have to wear thermal clothing, then pour water over yourself, then grab a fork and stick it in the toaster. thermal energy :)