A reaction/process that absorbs heat from surroundings.
What is "endothermic"?
The state of matter which has the greatest amount of kinetic energy in its particles....
What is "plasma"
Heat needed to raise 1g of a substance by 1°C...
What is "specific heat"?
Describe what happens to the KE value when the temperature increases
KE increases
When particles move away from each other it is called
What is expansion
Technique to measure heat transfer in reactions or physical changes.
What is "calorimetry"?
A reaction/process that releases heat to surroundings.
What is "exothermic"?
What is the specific heat of liquid water?
What is "4.182 J/g*C"
The state of matter that exists close to absolute zero
What is Bose Einstein Condensate? (BEC)
The molecules with the strongest attraction are in what state of matter
What is solid
Particles in a thermometer move upward when heated due to what process?
What is "thermal expansion"?
Which temperature scale is most often used in science research and experiments?
What is Kelvin
Energy transferred due to a temperature difference or "energy in transit" through a material
What is "heat"?
An insulator is the opposite of
Heat Capacity is...
What is, the amount of thermal energy that warms or cools an object by 1 degree
What is the temperature in Kelvin at absolute zero?
What is 0 Kelvin
In the "specific heat equation", what does the letter "Q" refer to?
What is heat or heat energy
Heat required to raise 1 mole of a substance by 1°C.
What is "Molar Heat Capacity"?
In the dancing penny experiment, the penny moved because ___________
What is the particles (molecules) expanded in the bottle because of the increase in heat
The movement of heat energy through liquid is called
Who created the first thermometer?
Who is Galileo
0 degrees Celsius equals how many degrees in Kelvin Scale
What is 273.15k
What is absolute zero measured in Celsius
-273.15 degrees Celsius
When two objects eventually reach the same temperature
What is Thermal Equilibrium?
The movement of heat energy particles through solids is called
What is Conduction