It can be, but so also is heat loss - for a hot body like a radiator.
Heat energy - yes. Temperature - no.
A temperature change requires as gain or loss of heat energy.
Thermal energy is energy that is related to heat and the temperature of matter.
Heat is the amount of energy transferred between objects where a difference in temperature is present. So in that sense, heat is related to temperature differences, but is not the same. The temperature difference is caused by the difference in the avg. speed of particles between the two objects.
They both have something to do with thermal energy.
Temperature and heat are different but related intensive properties. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles, while heat is the transfer of energy between systems due to a temperature difference.
Temperature and heat are related as temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a substance, while heat is the transfer of energy due to a temperature difference. In other words, increasing the temperature of a substance means increasing the average kinetic energy of its particles, leading to the transfer of heat.
it is related because heat is temperature and temperature tells how fast molecules move and thermal energy is kinetic + potential energy
Temperature,heat and thermal energy all deal with kentic energy.
Beause heat is transfered by high temp to low temp.If a system heats up so that its temperature is greater than atmospheric temperature the systan has high temp than atmospheric temp as heat transfer from high temp to low temp heat radiates from the system.
They both can change temperature
When water boils, the temperature remains constant at 100°C (at standard atmospheric pressure) because the added heat energy is used for the phase change from liquid to vapor rather than increasing the temperature. This energy is called the latent heat of vaporization. As heat is absorbed, water molecules gain enough energy to break free from the liquid state and enter the gaseous state, allowing the boiling process to occur without a rise in temperature.