Vocabulary 1
Vocabulary 2
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Heat Transfer
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100

Has a definite shape and a definite volume

Solid

100

Has a definite volume but no definite shape; takes the shape of its container.

Liquid

100

Foam picnic coolers keep food cool on a hot day. Is the foam a conductor or an insulator?

Insulator

100

Transfer of heat from one particle of matter to another within an object or between two objects that are in direct contact.

Conduction

100

The types of energy involved in using a light bulb are thermal, electrical, and light energy. Put these in the correct order to show the transformations that occur when a light bulb heats up after it is turned on.

Electrical --> Light --> Thermal

200

Has no definite volume and no definite shape.

Gas

200

Material that does not conduct heat well; absorbs heat.

Insulator

200

Bridge joints allow room for the bridge to expand in heat. What might happen if thermal expansion is not considered when building a bridge?

The bridge materials will expand when hot. Without some space built in for movement, the bridge materials could break or rupture.

200

Type of heat transfer that occurs through the movement of fluids, which can be solid, liquid, or gas.

Convection

200

A student uses a hand warmer to warm her hands at a football game. She activates it and tucks it into her glove. She holds her hands together, and before long, her hands are warm. How were her hands warmed?

Heat was transferred by conduction, resulting in an increase in kinetic energy.

300

Material that conducts or transmits heat well.

Conductor

300

Total kinetic and potential energy of the particles in an object.

Thermal energy

300

The specific heats of certain materials are listed below:

Iron - 450 (J/kg*K)

Aluminum - 900 (J/kg*K)

Steel - 502 (J/kg*K)

Glass - 840 (J/kg*K)

Plastic - 2302 (J/kg*K)

Which material requires the highest amount of energy to raise the temperature of 1 kg of material by 1 kelvin?

Plastic

300

Transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves.

Radiation

300

Water is unique in that is exists in all 3 states on Earth. What happens to the energy of particles when water vapor begins to cool?

The average kinetic energy decreases.

400

The expanding of matter when it is heated.

Thermal expansion.

400

Measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance.

Temperature

400

The specific heats of certain materials are listed below:

Iron - 450 (J/kg*K)

Aluminum - 900 (J/kg*K)

Steel - 502 (J/kg*K)

Glass - 840 (J/kg*K)

Plastic - 2302 (J/kg*K)

Which material requires the lowest amount of energy to raise the temperature of 1 kg of material by 1 kelvin?

Iron

400

Energy that is transferred from a warmer object to a cooler object.

Heat

400

What is the difference between energy transfer and energy transformation?

Transfer = energy being moved from one object to another.

Transform = energy is changed from one form to another.

500

Scientific principle that energy cannot be created or destroyed.

Law of Conservation of Energy

500

Amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of material by 1 kelvin.

Specific Heat

500

In an oven, electrical energy is transformed to thermal energy which cooks the food you put into it, raising the temperature. How does the law of conservation of energy apply to this situation?

Energy is not created or destroyed, it is just transformed and transferred within the oven-food system.

500

The movement of a fluid, caused by differences in temperature, that transfers heat from one part of the fluid to another.

Convection Current

500

The front door of a home is made of steel. When it's warm outside, the door is difficult to open and close because it gets stuck in the door frame. When the weather is cool, the door opens and closes easily. What explains the difference in how the door fits in the frame?

The metal in the door expands when it becomes warm due to an increase in kinetic energy, and contracts when it is cooler.

Thermal expansion.