All parts of the electromagnetic spectrum cause heat, and fires emit EM radiation based on a plank curve. However, in the majority of "normal" fires, the most common source is in the infrared spectrum.
Radiant heat is electromagnetic radiation. Thermal heat is the micro kinetic energy of the component atoms or molecules of a material substance. The "or" of the question can not be answered because there is no "or" involved.
Light is an example of a electromagnetic wave.
Infrared radiation is the electromagnetic wave that makes your skin feel warm. It has longer wavelengths than visible light and can penetrate the skin's surface, causing it to heat up.
radiation
An electromagnetic wave.
Yes.
-- a radio wave -- a heat wave -- a yellow wave -- a blue wave -- an ultraviolet wave -- an X-ray -- a gamma ray
Radiant heat is electromagnetic radiation. Thermal heat is the micro kinetic energy of the component atoms or molecules of a material substance. The "or" of the question can not be answered because there is no "or" involved.
Heat is transported through Infra red. It is an electromagnetic wave
'Heat' is the best kind of EM wave to use for warming.
it carries it using heat eergy flow!
Light is an example of a electromagnetic wave.
Mexican Wave? A non-electromagnetic wave.
A mechanical wave is not an electromagnetic wave.
Infrared radiation is the electromagnetic wave that makes your skin feel warm. It has longer wavelengths than visible light and can penetrate the skin's surface, causing it to heat up.
Any electromagnetic wave in vacuum is about 881,000 times faster than any sound in air.
So is the "heat" radiant heat, an electromagnetic wave? (Heat is used to mean many things.) Electricity gets turned into the electromagnetic infrared (heat).