Physics, asked by anushapandey793, 3 months ago

A thermometer resistor its own temperature. Justify?

Answers

Answered by OoExtrovertoO
3

Answer:

A thermometer always measures its own temperature. If it is in the shade, it reaches thermal equilibrium with the surrounding air molecules and measures that temperature. When heated by the sun's radiation it measures its own raised temperature.

Answered by DivineKing37
0

Answer:

A thermometer always measures its own temperature. If it is in the shade, it reaches thermal equilibrium with the surrounding air molecules and measures that temperature. When heated by the sun's radiation it measures its own raised temperature.

Explanation:

hope it helps you!

please mark me as a brainliest

Similar questions