Heat always travels from areas of higher temperature to areas of lower temperature, following the principle of thermal equilibrium. This movement is known as heat transfer, which can occur through conduction, convection, or radiation depending on the medium through which the heat is traveling.
Heat will always travel from an area of higher temperature to an area of lower temperature, following the principle of thermal equilibrium.
electricity always wants to travel through to complete the circut
Heat can travel by conduction (through direct contact), convection (through fluid movement), and radiation (through electromagnetic waves). Heat always moves from areas of higher temperature to areas of lower temperature in an attempt to reach thermal equilibrium.
Path length is a scalar quantity because it is only described by its magnitude and does not have a direction associated with it. It is the total distance traveled along a path regardless of the direction of travel.
Well, honey, heat capacity is a path function because it depends on the specific process or path taken to reach a certain state. It's all about how much heat is needed to change the temperature of a substance, and that can vary depending on the route you take. So, in a nutshell, heat capacity doesn't give a damn about the destination, it's all about the journey.
Not really, if you're referring to heat transfer, then the heat will use the path of least resistance. So the heat doesn't rely on the path as much as it does on the material that the heat must travel through.
Heat will always travel from an area of higher temperature to an area of lower temperature, following the principle of thermal equilibrium.
Waves waves
If there is physical matter between two points, then thermal energy (heat) can travel between them by means of conduction or convection. If there is no material in the path, or the material in the path is transparent in the infrared, then thermal energy can travel the path by radiation.
If there is physical matter between two points, then thermal energy (heat) can travel between them by means of conduction or convection. If there is no material in the path, or the material in the path is transparent in the infrared, then thermal energy can travel the path by radiation.
electricity always wants to travel through to complete the circut
6
Short circuit is the case when electricity, instead of travel through the design circuit path, jump across an unintended low resistance path and bypass the design circuit.A short circuit is a path for an electric current to travel through where there is very little resistance. This path is often, but not always, through a wire connected directly to a ground, and is often, but not always, unintentional.
The path on which planets travel is called their orbit.
Heat capacity is NOT a path function. It is a STATE function. It depends on the phase of the material, the temperature and the pressure. Usually heat capacity is known at some particular condition and then a calculation is required to estimate it at the condition of interest. Performing these calculations should always result in the same final value no matter the path you took to get to the value - hence it is a STATE function rather than PATH. Path functions would be things like WORK and HEAT (for which the state function "heat capacity" might be used in the calculations)
Light will almost always travel from one place to another along a path that takes the least amount of time. This does not imply that it will take the path involves the least distance all the time.
No, it is not.