No.
heat will flow from the iron to the water until both are the same temperature
In SI units, temperature is measured in Kelvin (K), and when people record the "heat" (such as how warm a room is, etc.) they usually mean temperature. If you mean heat in the strict scientific sense, you're talking about a transfer of energy, and energy has SI units of Joules.
Degrees Fahrenheit are a unit of temperature and British Thermal Units are units of heat; in physics, temperature and heat are not the same thing (although they are synonymous in normal English usage). To explain, the heat content of an object depends upon both the temperature and the heat capacity of that object, so for example, one liter of water has only half the heat capacity of two liters of water; even if your one liter container is at exactly the same temperature as the two liter container, it still has only half the heat content as measured in BTUs. So, since these units do not measure the same thing, they cannot be converted into eachother.
heat is considered a position of higher temperature.... Temperature on the hand is only a measure of a heat condition
No, heat transfer occurs due to a temperature difference between two substances. If both substances are at the same temperature, there is no temperature gradient to drive heat transfer, so no heat transfer will occur.
It is when all bodies are at the same temperature.
Yes, heat can transfer between objects with the same temperature. However, there will be no net transfer of heat because the objects are already in thermal equilibrium.
yes
The transfer of heat can be considered to have ended when the temperature of the system and its surroundings have reached equilibrium, meaning they are the same. This can be determined using a thermometer or by observing that there is no further change in temperature over time.
yes
have the same temperature and there is no net heat transfer between them.
when the temperature of the liquid is the same throughout.
yes
When two objects at the same temperature are in contact, no heat will transfer between them as there is no temperature difference driving the heat transfer. This is known as thermal equilibrium, where the objects reach a balance in their thermal energies.
Yes, if two objects are at the same temperature, there will be no net heat transfer between them. Heat transfer occurs due to a temperature difference, with heat naturally moving from a higher temperature object to a lower temperature object in an attempt to reach thermal equilibrium.
Energy is transferred as heat between two objects at the same temperature due to thermal equilibrium. In this state, there is no temperature difference driving heat flow, so heat transfer still occurs to maintain equilibrium between the two objects.