These substances have different thermal conduction rates so they would react to a change in ambient temperature at different rates. It would depend on where they were previously stored, and their size or thickness. Metal is a good conductor, wood and wool poor ones. If the wood and wool had been outside in sub-zero temperatures, they could well take many hours to stabilise at room temperature, but if all these objects had been in the house but perhaps in different rooms before being brought together, an overnight period should be enough to equalise temperatures.
if it was a cubick foot of water and the glass was the same and weighs less then the water than yes
Yes, glass can block some infrared light, depending on the type of glass and its thickness.
Yes, glass can block some infrared radiation, depending on the type of glass and its thickness.
The glass would likely shatter due to the rapid change in temperature causing thermal stress. Glass is sensitive to sudden changes in temperature, and placing a cold glass in a hot environment would cause uneven expansion, leading to the glass breaking.
When a ray of light is directed at a glass block, it will refract and change direction due to the change in medium from air to glass. The ray will bend towards the normal if it is entering the glass block, and away from the normal if it is exiting the block.
it would sharpen
The density of the glass has not changed, but since air is less dense than glass, the density of the block has decreased.
put glass over block (I would do pen size 9) then put ball in glass
It would cause light to refract differently because the angle at which the light hits the glass block would alter and there for the way the light refracts would also alter.
I want to create a custom shower using glass block windows. Where Is the best place to purchase glass block windows?
if it was a cubick foot of water and the glass was the same and weighs less then the water than yes
Yes, glass can block some infrared light, depending on the type of glass and its thickness.
Yes, glass can block some infrared radiation, depending on the type of glass and its thickness.
The glass would likely shatter due to the rapid change in temperature causing thermal stress. Glass is sensitive to sudden changes in temperature, and placing a cold glass in a hot environment would cause uneven expansion, leading to the glass breaking.
Glass panes use only half a block but still act like a full block. Normal glass blocks take up a full block
When a ray of light is directed at a glass block, it will refract and change direction due to the change in medium from air to glass. The ray will bend towards the normal if it is entering the glass block, and away from the normal if it is exiting the block.
I would say the glass of coke (served with ice-cubes in it) is colder than the can. The melting ice-cubes in the glass of coke hold it at constant freezing/melting temperature (32F), the can of coke comes out of the refrigerator at the same temperature as the refrigerator (~35F) and warms from there.