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Heat . Chapter 11. Whew! It's Hot! . Activator: Boiling water=100°C and 212°F Decide if each temperature is hot Or cold: 60°F 60°C 37°F 37°C 0°C 100°F 70°F. Temperature and thermal energy. Temperature – measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object
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Heat Chapter 11 Whew! It's Hot!
Activator: Boiling water=100°C and 212°F Decide if each temperature is hot Or cold: 60°F 60°C 37°F 37°C 0°C 100°F 70°F
Temperature – measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object Thermal energy – the TOTAL energy of the particles that make an object Heat – the transfer of energy between objects at different temperatures
Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object • The more kinetic energy particles have the higher the temperature will be
3) Temperature (unlike thermal energy) is not determined by the amount of substance. BUT – if you have more of the substance you will have MORE thermal energy because you have more particles
Summary Point 1: Talk with the person next to you and tell them how temperature and kinetic energy are related?
4) Thermal expansion is the increase in volume of a substance due to an increase in temperature. It happens because the particles spread away from each other when heated When particles spread apart the substance becomes less dense
5) The three temperature scales we use are Fahrenheit 32°F 212°F Celsius 0°C 100°C Kelvin 273K 373K
6) Heat is the transfer of thermal energy between objects that are at different temperatures.
7) Thermal Energy is the TOTAL energy of particles that make up a substance. It depends on temperature and amount of the substance.
8) The three ways thermal energy is transferred: Conduction Convection Radiation
9) Conduction is the transfer of thermal energy through direct contact between objects
10) Items that transfer thermal energy well are called conductors (metals) Items that DO NOT conduct energy well are called insulators
Every atom is physically bonded to its neighbors in some way. If heat energy is supplied to one part of a solid, the atoms vibrate faster. As they vibrate more, the bonds between atoms are shaken more. This passes vibrations on to the next atom, and so on: Eventually the energy spreads throughout the solid. The overall temperature has increased.
11) Convection: transfer of thermal energy by movement in a liquid or gas.
12) Radiation is the transfer of thermal energy through matter or space as electromagnetic waves. Examples: light and heat from a fire
Temperature vs Thermal energy: What’s the difference?
AP #3 Compare and Contrast heat, temperature, and thermal energy