22 August 2010

Transmission of heat

This is for all my secondary 1 Science students. It may also be beneficial for secondary 3 Physics students.

Please do not get the 3 types of transmission of heat mixed up. Heat is transmitted through 3 different ways: conduction, convection, radiation.

A quick recap: Conduction occurs in solids, liquids and gases, while convection occurs only in liquids and gases. Radiation requires no medium, which means it can even pass through vacuum! Please remember how each of these ways transmit heat. I will not elaborate them here so if you need help, read your notes and textbook, or look for me in school!

Now, when we say a thing is a good conductor, it means this thing can transmit heat efficiently (quickly) by conduction. Similarly, an insulator or bad conductor is a thing that is inefficient (slow) in transmitting heat by conduction. You may lose marks if you used the word "conductor" in a wrong context.

When we are describing a thing that is transmitting heat through radiation, we do not use the word "conductor". To describe things that are giving out heat through radiation, we use words like "emitter" or "radiator". And to describe things that are taking in heat through radiation, we use the word "absorber".

image taken from http://www.stainless-steel-kitchenware.com/steel-tea-pots.html
For example, let's look at the teapot, which has a silver shiny surface and is made of metal. It is a good conductor of heat because of it's material, metal. If you put hot tea in it, the whole teapot would quickly be hot to touch as its body is a good conductor of heat. However, it is also a bad emitter of heat because of its silver shiny surface, and this helps to keep the tea warm for a longer time. The silver shiny surface also makes it a bad absorber of heat, and thus it also keeps cool beverages cool for a longer time.

Please approach me for help if you still could not understand when to use "conductor", "insulator", "emitter" and "absorber" when describing the things that transmit heat.

Lastly, please bear in mind that there is no such thing as a "non-conductor of heat"! The statement "an insulator is not a conductor of heat" or "an insulator does not conduct heat" is WRONG! Do not be confused between insulators of heat and insulators of electricity. In the topic on electricity which will be covered in your secondary 2 syllabus, insulators do not conduct electricity. But in our current topic on transmission of heat, insulators of heat are bad conductors of heat. Everything can conduct heat, and an insulator is just a bad/poor conductor of heat. Insulators still conduct heat! As long as there is a difference in temperature, heat (or thermal energy) will flow from the region of higher temperature to the region of lower temperature. A good conductor allow the heat to flow faster while a poor conductor takes a much longer time for heat to be transmitted from the region of higher temperature to the region of lower temperature.

07 August 2010

Kinematics summary note

Summary note on distance-time graph and velocity-time graph for my sec 3 students; click for full size image. Pardon the untidy hand written note.


Happy long weekend and happy National Day on 9 August! (^_^)

20 July 2010

Free fall on the moon



Watch again as the hammer and feather fall.


You may also like to read up on Galileo Galilei and find out why he's called the "father of modern physics".

19 July 2010

Greenhouse effect & global warming

Links in the last page of Mdm Koo's notes on Transmission of Heat:

Energy Efficiency - Reducing Heat Transfer
Energy efficiency by reducing heat transfer

Global Warming - The Greenhouse Effect
An interactive overview on National Geographic



What can you do in your everyday life to help reduce global warming?
Answer: BYOB!

15 July 2010

In class on 15 July 2010

1E asked about 'girders' when we were looking at heat and its effects on bridges and girders. Here's a little more information to share:
Definition of "Girder" on Dictionary.com
"Girder" on Wikipedia