One way is if an object has, or is given energy. For example, if you turn a lamp on and leave it, it starts to get hot from the energy being given to it
No. That's one of the things that makes fireflies an object of interest in chemical research.
the negative effects of force are:- *force can stop a moving object. *force can produce heat. *force is not desirable
Yes, flashlights produce heat.
As your teacher..............
heat travel from a hot object first then to cold object!
Heat can not produce light without heating a certain object or material meaning heat by itself cannot produce light on its own.
I'm going to suggest heat. You could describe heat as the atomic motion of an object. The movements don't really produce heat they are heat.
yes it can. As it produces loads of heat which no other object yet discovered does produce. The sun's heat can melt anything!
No. That's one of the things that makes fireflies an object of interest in chemical research.
A firefly is an example of an object that produces its own light. The sun is another.
the negative effects of force are:- *force can stop a moving object. *force can produce heat. *force is not desirable
As your teacher..............
Yes, flashlights produce heat.
heat travel from a hot object first then to cold object!
Heat is transferred from an object that has a thermal conductivity temperature to another object through heat conduction.
Heaters use electricity to produce heat by resistance.
Yes, it does produce heat energy.