Question
A reaction is occurring in a test tube. How is heat transmitted to the surroundings? (1 point)
As bubbles are formed and gas escapes, the heat is carried with the rising bubbles.
All of the heat escapes out of the open top of the test tube as molecules collide with the air.
Heat is carried out with matter as matter is changed with the surroundings.
Molecules collide with the glass, and the glass molecules then transmit that energy to the outside.
As bubbles are formed and gas escapes, the heat is carried with the rising bubbles.
All of the heat escapes out of the open top of the test tube as molecules collide with the air.
Heat is carried out with matter as matter is changed with the surroundings.
Molecules collide with the glass, and the glass molecules then transmit that energy to the outside.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct statement regarding how heat is transmitted to the surroundings in a reaction occurring in a test tube is:
**Molecules collide with the glass, and the glass molecules then transmit that energy to the outside.**
This describes the conduction process where heat energy is transferred from the molecules of the reaction to the glass of the test tube, which can then transfer that heat to the surrounding environment.
**Molecules collide with the glass, and the glass molecules then transmit that energy to the outside.**
This describes the conduction process where heat energy is transferred from the molecules of the reaction to the glass of the test tube, which can then transfer that heat to the surrounding environment.
There are no human answers yet. A form for humans to post answers is coming very soon!