technically speaking your body gains thermal energy because we are thinking about celcius not farrenheit. you should always know the difference between those two and if you dont ohwell you shouldnt be looking this question up online because this is probobally your homework. you should be thinking about this on your own in your textbook. and if you still dont understand it OHHHWELLL ask your teacher at school or a parent or guardian . umhumm i went their sistta!
4° C is the temperature of maximum density for water. Change temperature in either direction from there -- whether you warm it or cool it -- the density decreases.
It really just depends, if its 67 degress C then that cold for sure. But in my opinion that is cold.
That's going to depend on how much water you're responsible for. Teacup at 60 degrees . . . very few BTU. Swimming pool at 60 degrees . . . many more BTU. It's also going to depend on whether you're talking about Celsius or Fahrenheit degrees. Fahrenheit degrees . . . fewer BTU. Celsius degrees . . . more BTU. (Also, the water will escape as you pass 100.) In general, one BTU is approximately the energy required to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1 degree Fahrenheit. You can take it from there, when you reach the job site and determine the exact scope of the work.
The answer depends on whether 350000000 is in degrees or radians!
Theta is the measure of the angle, whether in degrees or radians.
25degres celsius has more thermal energy
yes it does
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 you loose. because you are not carging energyyou losseing energy
Heat flows from a hotter body to a cooler one, and never the reverse.
The answer depends on whether you mean degrees of temperature or degrees of tilt.
Behind the value there could be °F for degrees Fahrenheit or °C for degrees Celsius. When it freezes at 0 degrees Celsius it is 32 degrees Fahrenheit. A hot temperature of 40 degrees Celsius is 104 degrees Fahrenheit.
Not sure what you are trying to ask. 360 degrees (whether Celsius or Fahrenheit) is far higher than any temperature encountered anywhere on Earth.
A degree is a portion of some large quantity, whether it be of temperature, width of arc, or a goal. A compass has 360 degrees. Temperature is measured in degrees, irregardless of the type of scale, Celsius, Fahrenheit, or Kelvin.
How you can tell is the temperature between the two liquids. If one of the liquid's temperature is warmer than the other one, then that liquid has more thermal energy.
How you can tell is the temperature between the two liquids. If one of the liquid's temperature is warmer than the other one, then that liquid has more thermal energy.
How you can tell is the temperature between the two liquids. If one of the liquid's temperature is warmer than the other one, then that liquid has more thermal energy.