Question
What is temperature a measure of?
What is the relationship between temperature and thermal energy? Is temperature different from thermal energy? How?
When the temperature of a substance increases, what happens to the kinetic energy of its particles?
What happens with a decrease in temperature?
How do thermometers work?
How do you convert between Fahrenheit and Celsius?
What is the Kelvin scale?
What is absolute zero?
answer each one in order 1-8 and I want you to make sure its a very short sentence and make It sound casual and simple. make it seem like an 8th grader wrote it
What is the relationship between temperature and thermal energy? Is temperature different from thermal energy? How?
When the temperature of a substance increases, what happens to the kinetic energy of its particles?
What happens with a decrease in temperature?
How do thermometers work?
How do you convert between Fahrenheit and Celsius?
What is the Kelvin scale?
What is absolute zero?
answer each one in order 1-8 and I want you to make sure its a very short sentence and make It sound casual and simple. make it seem like an 8th grader wrote it
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
1. Temperature measures how hot or cold something is.
2. Temperature is like a pointer for thermal energy, but they’re not the same.
3. Yes, temperature is different from thermal energy; temperature is about how fast particles move, while thermal energy is the total energy from all particles.
4. When temperature goes up, the kinetic energy of particles increases, so they move faster.
5. If temperature goes down, the kinetic energy of particles decreases, making them move slower.
6. Thermometers work by using liquids that expand or contract with temperature changes.
7. To convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius, use (°F - 32) × 5/9, and for Celsius to Fahrenheit, use (°C × 9/5) + 32.
8. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, which is the point where all particle motion stops, about -273.15°C.
2. Temperature is like a pointer for thermal energy, but they’re not the same.
3. Yes, temperature is different from thermal energy; temperature is about how fast particles move, while thermal energy is the total energy from all particles.
4. When temperature goes up, the kinetic energy of particles increases, so they move faster.
5. If temperature goes down, the kinetic energy of particles decreases, making them move slower.
6. Thermometers work by using liquids that expand or contract with temperature changes.
7. To convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius, use (°F - 32) × 5/9, and for Celsius to Fahrenheit, use (°C × 9/5) + 32.
8. The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero, which is the point where all particle motion stops, about -273.15°C.
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