Introduction to heat and temperature



Heat :

  • Heat is the form energy which gives us the sen­sa­tion of warmth.Introduction to heat and temperature
  • Heat flows from a hot body to a cold body when they are placed in ther­mal contact.
  • It is mea­sured by an instru­ment called ‘Calorime­ter’.

  • It can be also defined as it is the mea­sure­ment of aver­age kinetic energy of mol­e­cules of an object.
  • The total amount of heat in an object depends upon the fol­low­ing factors:
              1. The total num­ber of mol­e­cules in the  object or the mass of the object
              2.  The aver­age kinetic energy of the mol­e­cules of the object.
  •  SI unit : Joule (J).
  •  CGS unit: calo­rie (Cal)
  •  MKS unit : kilocalorie(Kcal)
  • 4.2 joule = 1 Cal
  • 1000 Cal = 1 Kcal
  • 4200 J = 1Kcal
  • 1 Calo­rie: The amount of heat required to raise the tem­per­a­ture of 1 gm water at 40 through 10 is called 1 calorie.

Tem­per­a­ture: 

  • Tem­per­a­ture is the degree of hot­ness and cold­ness of an object.
  • In other words, tem­per­a­ture is the ther­mal con­di­tion of a body which deter­mines flow of heat from it to another body in its contact.
  • It also can be said that tem­per­a­ture is the aver­age kinetic energy of mol­e­cules.
  • A device which is used for mea­sur­ing the tem­per­a­ture of a body is called ther­mome­ter. The ther­mome­ter works on the basis of prin­ci­ple that “when a body is heater, it expands and con­tracts on cooling.”
  • SI unit: kelvin

Tem­per­a­ture scale:

  • In gen­eral ther­mome­ters are cal­i­brated in centi­grade scale, Fahren­heit scale and Kelvin scale.

Centi­grade scale:

  • The lower fixed point is 0^0C and upper fixed point is 100^0C.
  • The inter­val between these two fixed points is divided into 100 equal parts and each part is called one degree centigrade.

Fahren­heit scale:

  • The lower fixed point is 32^0F and upper fixed point is 212^0.
  • The inter­val between these two points is divided into 180 equal parts and each part is called one degree Fahrenheit.

Kelvin scale:

  • The lower fixed point is 273K and the upper fixed point is 373K.
  • The inter­val between these two points is divided into 100 equal divi­sions and each divi­sion is called one kelvin.

In short
Lower fixed points : 0^0 C=32^0 F=273 K
Upper fixed points: 100^0 C=212^0 F=373 K

Con­ver­sion of temperature

If C, F and K are the read­ings on Centi­grade, Fahren­heit and Kelvin scales, we can con­vert tem­per­a­ture from one scale to another scale using fol­low­ing relation.

\frac{C-0}{100}=\frac{F-32}{180}=\frac{K-273}{100}


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