Science, asked by samiahabib2008, 6 months ago

Q1: Consider object A which has temperature of 65 degrees Celsius and object B which has a temperature of 15 degrees Celsius. The two objects are placed next to each other. Will any of collision result in the transfer of energy between two objects? Explain.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
8

⭐️Answer⭐️

Most certainly yes.

⭐️Explanation⭐️

The average kinetic energy of the particles in Object A is greater than the average kinetic energy of the particles in Object B. But there is a range of speeds and thus of kinetic energy in both objects. As such, there will be some highly energetic particles in Object B and some very non-energetic particles in Object A. When this combination of particles encounter a collision, there will a transfer of energy across the boundary from Object B (the colder object) to Object A (the hotter object). This is just one collision. Since majority of collisions result from the more energetic particles of Object A with less energetic particles of collision B, there will be a net kinetic energy transfer from Object A to Object B.

Hope it helps u

Answered by chrissymckinney030
0

Answer:

Explanation thdusnw d:

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