when objects are heated or cooled, their temperatures change, along with some of their properties, these properties are known as Thermometric Properties. Examples include: when objects are heated, they expand, when they are cooled, they shrink. Another is, if an object is heated, its' gaseos pressure will increase and will decrease when object is cooled.
it is a physical property.
The substance used as a thermometer must have a property that varies proportionally / linearly with temperature.
(This property can be changed by temperature.)
e.g., alcohol-in-glass/ Mercury-in-glass thermometer has a physical property of hot expand, cold contract.
p.s. Resistance of metal wire is also one of the thermometric property of Resistance thermometer or thermistor thermometer.
density, freezing temperature, boiling temperature
, latent heat of melting, latent heat of evaporation, critical temperature. Those are some I believe :D
Thermometric property of a substance is a physical property of the substance that caries linearly and continuously with variation temperature
A thermal property of a substance involves its ability to contain heat energy. The three types of thermal properties are specific heat, thermal conductivity and thermal expansion.
A physical property that changes in a known way with temperature, and can therefore be used to measure temperature.
All materials have thermal properties.
Thermal Conducter
A thick mug.
Some are latent heat, temperature, thermal conductivity, stability (as opposed to explosiveness), insulation ability which is related to thermal conductivity, and others.
Thermal and electrical conductivity are physical properties; they represent the ability of materials to conduct heat or electrical current.
All materials have thermal properties.
thermal conductivity of iron ore
Thermal Conducter
density, hardness, electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, melting point, boiling point, magnetic properties, Curie point, mechanical properties, thermodynamic properties, thermal expansion, etc.
Thermal Conducter
All matter has thermal properties, so yes.
T. Hatakeyama has written: 'Thermal properties of green polymers and biocomposites' -- subject(s): Polymers, Biodegradation, Thermal properties
Yes.
A thick mug.
Siddhartha Gaur has written: 'An atlas of thermal data for biomass and other fuels' -- subject(s): Biomass energy, Thermal properties 'Thermal data for natural and synthetic fuels' -- subject(s): Thermal properties, Fuel, Synthetic fuels
The important Thermal Properties of Non-Ferrous Metals are:- 1. High Rate of Heat Transfer 2. Good Thermal Expansion 3. May be used as a High Temperature Superconductor
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