Hot and Cold (Heat)
Sound, Heat, and Floating: Hot and Cold (Heat)
Hot and Cold (Heat)
Hot and Cold (Heat)
What you'll learn
- Heat always flows from a hotter object to a colder object.
- A thermometer is used to measure how hot or cold something is.
- Ice is a cold solid that melts into water when it absorbs heat.
- Wearing a woollen sweater keeps us warm by trapping body heat.
- Metal spoons feel hotter than wooden spoons in hot tea, because metal conducts heat faster.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Core idea
Verbal: Heat moves on its own from a hotter object to a colder one until both become equally warm.
Symbolic: hot object → heat flows → cold object (until both are equally warm)
Visual: Dip a metal spoon and a wooden spoon in hot tea — the metal spoon warms up faster in your hand.
Level 2 — Going deeper
Think about where you see this idea in daily life at home and school — noticing it around you makes the concept easier to remember.
NCERT anchor
NCERT Looking Around 3 'keeping warm' chapter explores wool, sweaters, and why some materials trap heat better.
Worked example
You place an ice cube on a warm plate. What happens, and why?
Step 1 — The plate is warmer than the ice
Step 2 — **Heat flows** from the plate into the ice
Answer: **The ice melts as it absorbs heat from the plate**
Why does a metal spoon in hot tea feel hotter to touch than a wooden spoon in the same tea?
Step 1 — Metal lets heat pass through it quickly
Step 2 — Wood lets heat pass through it slowly
Answer: **Metal conducts heat faster, so it feels hotter**
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Heat flows from cold to hot | Reversing the direction | Heat flows from hot to cold |
| Wool makes new heat | Misunderstanding how sweaters work | Wool traps existing body heat, it does not create heat |
| A thermometer measures weight | Confusing what a thermometer does | A thermometer measures temperature (hot or cold) |
| Wood conducts heat faster than metal | Reversing the materials | Metal conducts heat faster than wood |
Quick check
- Which way does heat flow — hot to cold, or cold to hot?
- What is a thermometer used for?
- Why does ice melt when left on a warm plate?
- Stretch: Why do we wrap food in a cloth to keep it warm for longer?
Revision tip: Remember: heat always moves from the hotter side to the colder side, never the other way.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Hot and Cold (Heat).
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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