Physical Science - Chapter 15
Temperature: the measure of the hotness or coldness of a substance; proportional to the average kinetic energy of the particles within the substance
Thermometric Property: any property that changes predictably with changes in temperature
Thermal Expansion: the property of many materials to increase in volume when heated and contract when cooled
Temperature Scales
Fahrenheit
Celsius
Kelvin
Heat: movement of thermal energy from an area of higher temperature to one of lower temperature
Energy Transfer
Conduction: movement of electric charge or thermal energy through an object or from object to object through direct contact
Convection: movement of thermal energy as fluids move
Radiation: movement o energy in the form of electromagnetic waves
Thermal Conductor: a material through which thermal energy moves easily
Thermal Insulator: a material through which thermal energy does not easily move
Measuring Heat
Specific heat: the energy required to raise the temperature of 1 g of a substance 1 degree Celsius
Calorimeter: a device that enables scientists to measure the thermal energy transferred in reactions and between systems
Energy Transfer By Heating
Heating ice
Melting ice
Heating water
Vaporizing water
Heating steam
Thermodynamics: the study of thermal energy and heat and how they relate to work and other forms of energy
Caloric Theory: the now-obsolete theory that stated that heat was an invisible self-repelling fluid
Laws of Thermodynamics:
First Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that energy cannot be created or destroyed but only transferred between objects or transformed; also known as law of conservation of energy
Second Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that energy can flow from a colder object to a warmer object only if something does work
Third Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that entropy would be at its minimum value at absolute zero. Therefore, absolute zero can never be achieved
Temperature: the measure of the hotness or coldness of a substance; proportional to the average kinetic energy of the particles within the substance
Thermometric Property: any property that changes predictably with changes in temperature
Thermal Expansion: the property of many materials to increase in volume when heated and contract when cooled
Temperature Scales
Fahrenheit
Celsius
Kelvin
Heat: movement of thermal energy from an area of higher temperature to one of lower temperature
Energy Transfer
Conduction: movement of electric charge or thermal energy through an object or from object to object through direct contact
Convection: movement of thermal energy as fluids move
Radiation: movement o energy in the form of electromagnetic waves
Thermal Conductor: a material through which thermal energy moves easily
Thermal Insulator: a material through which thermal energy does not easily move
Measuring Heat
Specific heat: the energy required to raise the temperature of 1 g of a substance 1 degree Celsius
Calorimeter: a device that enables scientists to measure the thermal energy transferred in reactions and between systems
Energy Transfer By Heating
Heating ice
Melting ice
Heating water
Vaporizing water
Heating steam
Thermodynamics: the study of thermal energy and heat and how they relate to work and other forms of energy
Caloric Theory: the now-obsolete theory that stated that heat was an invisible self-repelling fluid
Laws of Thermodynamics:
First Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that energy cannot be created or destroyed but only transferred between objects or transformed; also known as law of conservation of energy
Second Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that energy can flow from a colder object to a warmer object only if something does work
Third Law of Thermodynamics: the law that states that entropy would be at its minimum value at absolute zero. Therefore, absolute zero can never be achieved