Heat rises because hot air is less dense than cold air, causing it to float upwards. This phenomenon is known as convection. As hot air rises, it displaces colder air, creating a cycle of air movement that transfers heat vertically.
Heat rises in a room.
No, heat rises and cold sinks. When air or water is heated, it becomes less dense and rises, while cooler air or water is denser and sinks. This movement creates convection currents that transfer heat throughout a fluid.
In a convection current, heat rises.
It is incorrect to say that "heat rises" because heat does not have mass or volume to physically move in a specific direction. Heat transfer occurs from hot to cold areas due to the movement of thermal energy, known as convection, which leads to the misconception of heat "rising."
Think of a pot of boiling water. The burner makes the heat, the heat rises, and the cold water replaces it, then the cold water gets hotter and rises. It's a cycle
Because of convection: heat rises and cold sinks
Heat from the Earth rises to the surface because heat rises. Heat rises because it is energy and the atoms are looking for more space to move freely in.
ripples occur above something when heat rises because those are called heat waves.
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up because heat rises
no, it is powered by heat. heat rises.
Heat rises in a room.
Heat always rises and its a type of energy
no, it is powered by heat. heat rises.
heat rises....
themometer
Heat rises.