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1.12: Thermal Energy

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    122408
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    • 1.12.1: "Lost" Energy and the Discovery of Conservation of Energy
    • 1.12.2: Kinetic Theory of Heat
    • 1.12.3: Thermometers and Temperature Scales
      Three types of thermometers are alcohol, liquid crystal, and infrared radiation (pyrometer). The three main temperature scales are Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin. Temperatures can be converted from one scale to another using temperature conversion equations. The three phases of water (ice, liquid water, and water vapor) can coexist at a single pressure and temperature known as the triple point.
    • 1.12.4: Heat Transfer, Specific Heat, and Calorimetry
      Heat is a type of energy transfer that is caused by a temperature difference, and it can change the temperature of an object. As we learned earlier in this chapter, heat transfer is the movement of energy from one place or material to another as a result of a difference in temperature. Heat transfer is fundamental to such everyday activities as home heating and cooking, as well as many industrial processes. It also forms a basis for the topics in the remainder of this chapter.
    • 1.12.5: Microscopic Origins of Thermal Expansion
      We can only measure temperature by the macroscopic effects caused by its change.  One of the most apparent effects is the expansion/contraction of solid and liquid matter when the temperature increases/decreases.
    • 1.12.6: Thermal Energy (Exercises)

    In this chapter, we will finally find where all of the energy goes that we have considered "lost" in previous chapters. We will find an equivalence between thermal energy and other energies we have studied. Finally, we will learn how to solve simple problems that involve thermal energy and changes of temperature of objects.


    1.12: Thermal Energy is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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