25degres celsius has more thermal energy
You will lose thermal energy.Heat (energy) will always flow from warmer to cooler.
Your body would gain thermal energy because thermal energy only moves from something at a higher temperature to something at a lower temperature.
Thermal energy is a measure of the internal energy of a system and is not dependent on the unit of temperature used. Therefore, the thermal energy at 0 degrees Celsius would be the same as at 48 degrees Fahrenheit.
The block of ice will remain stable and maintain its temperature of 0 degrees Celsius as long as the room temperature is also 0 degrees Celsius. Both will eventually reach thermal equilibrium, but there will be no change in state or temperature of the ice as it melts since the room temperature is not warmer than the ice.
minus 273.15 degrees Celsius
The object at fifty degrees Celsius will absorb heat from the object at seventy degrees Celsius, decreasing the temperature difference between them. Both objects will eventually reach a thermal equilibrium where they settle at a common temperature between fifty and seventy degrees Celsius.
Specific heat capacity is the term that describes the amount of thermal energy required to raise the temperature of a substance by 1.0 degree Celsius.
No. Temperature is measured in degrees celsius. Thermal energy, which causes temperature change, is measured in calories or british thermal units. A calorie, not a food calorie, is the amount of heat necessary to raise 1 ml of water 1 degree celsius. 252 calories = 1 btu. 1 food calorie is actually equivalent to 1000 calories of heat.
yes it does
8.8kg...i guessed
Absolute zero on the Celsius temperature scale is -273.15 degrees Celsius. At this temperature, molecules have minimal kinetic energy and theoretically cease all motion. It is considered the lowest possible temperature that can be reached, where thermal energy is at its minimum.
This temperature is impossible! You must mean -273 degrees CELSIUS (centigrade if you are in the USA). Your "k" implies the KELVIN (K) scale of temperature, which starts at 0 K which is -273 degrees Celsius (C). Both scales change similarly - 1 degrees Celsius = 1 Kelvin (NOTE: NOT degrees Kelvin). At -273 degrees Celsius ALL particle motion has stopped. Ice would have formed well before this temperature - about 270 degrees before!