Now let’s take explore how, even though heat can move from one object to another, it doesn’t necessarily mean that the temperature of the objects will change. You may ask, “What? Heat can move from one object to another without temperature changing one little bit?!?!” We’re going to take a look at one of the ways heat can move while the thermometer doesn’t.


When things change phase (change from solid to liquid or liquid to gas or… well, you get the picture) the temperature of those objects don’t change. If you were able to take the temperature of water as it changed from a solid (ice) to a liquid you would notice that the temperature of that piece of ice will stay at about 32° F until that piece of ice was completely melted. The temperature would not increase at all. Even if that ice was in an oven, the temperature would stay the same. Once all the solid ice had disappeared, then you would see the temperature of the puddle of water increase.


By the way, as the ice is melting, from where is heat being transferred? Heat is being transferred, by conduction, from the air.


One key distinction is that objects don’t contain heat, but they contain energy. Heat is the transfer of energy from from one object to another, or from one system to another, like a hot cup of coffee to the cool ambient air. Heat can change the temperature of objects when it transfers the energy. In the example with the coffee cup, it lowered the temperature of the coffee.


Imagine putting a sponge under a slowly running faucet. The sponge would continue to fill with water until it reached a certain point and then water started to drip from it. You could say that the sponge had a water capacity. It could hold so much water before it couldn’t hold any more and the water started dripping out.


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