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Science-Related Homework Help Physics Topic started by: nursing111 on Dec 20, 2012



Title: On the particle level, how is heat transfered between particles?
Post by: nursing111 on Dec 20, 2012
I need a discription of how heat is transfered between particles on the particle level for a science essay. You don't have to make it fancy, I can do that.


Title: On the particle level, how is heat transfered between particles?
Post by: ToniXD on Dec 20, 2012
Heat is transferred through conduction (convection is really just a form of conduction). When 2 particles come in contact with each other they will use thermodynamic principles (the zeroth law I believe)  in order to obtain a mean of their temperatures. When any 2 objects come in contact they will transfer energy in some form between each other. Atoms vibrate dependent on their energy (heat) so there will be more contact to their movement, much like one of the answered gave a reference to the elastic collisions.


Title: On the particle level, how is heat transfered between particles?
Post by: asizzle2002 on Dec 20, 2012
Particles vibrate and that vibration rate increases with temperature.  A particle at absolute zero does not vibrate at all and .  The more a particle vibrates, the more frictional heat it generates and transfers the heat to other particles via conduction.  

The second law of thermodynamics states that heat is transferred from a hot body to a cold body.  A colder object can NEVER give up its heat to a warmer object.

Simply stated then, heat is transferred between hot particles and cold particles due to the second law of thermodynamics.