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simple answers only please I ain't even in high school!!!!!

2006-08-22 16:01:03 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Other - Social Science

6 answers

Heat flows from something hot into something cold.

If you had a stone that was heated in a fire and you threw it into a bucket of water, the heat from the stone would flow into the water and would keep flowing into the water until both the stone and the water were the same temperature.

2006-08-22 16:03:03 · answer #1 · answered by Trevor 7 · 2 0

Heat will flow in the direction of the most conductance. For instance, if you had a rod that was made with one half of its length being copper and the other half of the length plastic, and if you heated it in the center where the two meet, the heat would flow into the copper half and the other plastic half would remain cold if it did not melt where you were heating it. Plastic does not conduct heat and metal does. Or, if the plastic was wood, the same thing would happen. The wooden half would not even get hot and the copper half would suck all of the heat into it.

2006-08-22 16:09:23 · answer #2 · answered by Tony T 4 · 1 0

in general heat flows from areas of high heat to areas of lower heat.

2006-08-22 16:02:56 · answer #3 · answered by Mama R 5 · 0 0

From higher energy levels (hot) to lower energy levels (cool) in an attempt to reach a state of equilibrium.

2006-08-22 16:08:23 · answer #4 · answered by Larry T 5 · 1 0

the temperature of an merchandise? to illustrate, in case you have a cup of boiling water and a cup of chilly water, and you place them jointly, the warmth is going to flow from the boiling water to the chilly water.

2016-12-14 10:07:58 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Hot air goes up.
cold air goes down.

2006-08-22 16:20:34 · answer #6 · answered by NANCY K 6 · 1 0

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