they are different. temperature is the movement of particles. heat is the movement of temperature from place to place. temperature are the moving particles, heat is the movement of those particles from a place to a place.
Yes, two objects can have the same temperature but different heat because heat depends not only on temperature but also on the mass and specific heat capacity of the objects. Objects with different masses or specific heat capacities can have different amounts of heat energy even if they are at the same temperature.
No, different materials have different specific heat capacities, which refers to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of that material by one degree Celsius. So, the same amount of different materials would not need the same amount of heat to achieve the same change in temperature.
Yes, two bodies at the same temperature can have different amounts of heat because heat is a measure of the total thermal energy contained within an object. The amount of heat a body has depends on its mass and specific heat capacity, regardless of its temperature.
There is a formula in physics ΔQ=m*c*ΔT, where m is the mass of the substance you are heating, ΔQ is the heat you supply to the substance, c is the specific heat which has a different value for different substances and ΔT is the change in temperature. If your substances are different and they have the same mass then by supplying the same amount of heat the change in temperature will be different.
Each substance has a different heat capacity, which means they need different amounts of energy to change temperature by the same amount (for a given mass). If the same amount of energy is input, then the temperature difference will also be different.
Yes, two objects can have the same temperature but different heat because heat depends not only on temperature but also on the mass and specific heat capacity of the objects. Objects with different masses or specific heat capacities can have different amounts of heat energy even if they are at the same temperature.
Heat and temperature are related but not the same thing. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance, while heat is the transfer of energy between objects due to a temperature difference. Heat can change the temperature of an object by transferring energy to it.
No, different materials have different specific heat capacities, which refers to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a unit mass of that material by one degree Celsius. So, the same amount of different materials would not need the same amount of heat to achieve the same change in temperature.
Yes, two bodies at the same temperature can have different amounts of heat because heat is a measure of the total thermal energy contained within an object. The amount of heat a body has depends on its mass and specific heat capacity, regardless of its temperature.
There is a formula in physics ΔQ=m*c*ΔT, where m is the mass of the substance you are heating, ΔQ is the heat you supply to the substance, c is the specific heat which has a different value for different substances and ΔT is the change in temperature. If your substances are different and they have the same mass then by supplying the same amount of heat the change in temperature will be different.
Each substance has a different heat capacity, which means they need different amounts of energy to change temperature by the same amount (for a given mass). If the same amount of energy is input, then the temperature difference will also be different.
Heat is a form of energy, temperature is a point on an arbitary scale. A hot day is not the same temperature as a hot drink and that is not the same temperature as a hot oven. The temperatures 20C, 68F, 293K and 528Ra are all the same temperature on different scales.
Two objects can have different heat capacities, which means they require different amounts of heat to raise their temperature. This is due to differences in mass, composition, and specific heat capacity. Therefore, adding the same amount of heat to two objects may result in different temperature increases based on these factors.
Heat is the cause and temperature is the effect. Heat is energy but temperature is outcome of storage of such heat energy in a body. If same amount of heat is given to the same mass of water and aluminium, then temperature will be more in aluminium but less in water. This is similar to the collecting air in different containers. Air is equivalent to heat and pressure created is equivalent to temperature.
No, different materials have different specific heat capacities, which means they require different amounts of heat to raise their temperature by the same amount. The specific heat capacity is a property specific to each material and determines how much heat energy is needed to increase the temperature of a unit mass of that material by 1 degree Celsius.
Specific heat capacities. This is a measure of how much heat energy is required to raise the temperature of a substance by a certain amount. Objects with different specific heat capacities will require different amounts of heat to achieve the same temperature change.
Yes, it is possible for two substances to have the same specific heat if they have similar atomic or molecular structures. However, it is more common for substances to have different specific heat values based on their composition and the way their atoms or molecules interact with heat energy.