By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain why touch alone is not a reliable measure of temperature
  • 2Define temperature as a measure of hotness or coldness
  • 3Read a thermometer correctly using the Celsius scale
  • 4Distinguish between clinical and laboratory thermometers by range and use
  • 5State normal human body temperature as 37.0°C
  • 6Record and analyze daily temperature variations
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Why this chapter matters
Temperature measurement is a fundamental scientific skill used in medicine, cooking, meteorology, industry, and research. Understanding thermometers, temperature scales, and why instruments are more reliable than human senses builds scientific literacy and practical life skills.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Temperature and its Measurement — Class 6 Science (Curiosity)

1. About This Chapter

Chapter 7 starts with Lambok and his sister Phiban — Lambok might have a fever, and they use a thermometer to check. This simple story sets the stage for understanding temperature: what it means, how we measure it, and why our sense of touch alone is not reliable. The chapter covers clinical and laboratory thermometers, the Celsius scale, and real-world applications.


2. Hot and Cold — Touch Is Not Reliable

Our sense of touch can mislead us about temperature:

The Three-Bowl Activity:

  • Bowl 1: Hot water
  • Bowl 2: Lukewarm water (room temperature)
  • Bowl 3: Cold water

Put one hand in hot water and the other in cold water for a minute. Then put BOTH hands in Bowl 2 (lukewarm). The hand that was in hot water feels cold; the hand that was in cold water feels warm. Same water, different sensations!

This proves we need instruments — thermometers — for accurate temperature measurement.


3. What Is Temperature?

Temperature is a measure of how hot or cold an object is. It tells us the degree of hotness or coldness, not just a feeling.

The Celsius Scale:

  • Unit: degree Celsius (°C)
  • Water freezes at 0°C
  • Water boils at 100°C
  • Normal human body temperature: 37.0°C

4. Clinical Thermometers

Clinical thermometers measure body temperature:

Features:

  • Range: typically 35°C to 42°C (relevant for body temperature)
  • Has a kink — prevents mercury/alcohol from falling back immediately
  • Digital thermometers are now more common — safer and easier to read

How to Use:

  1. Wash the tip before and after use
  2. Place under the tongue or in the armpit
  3. Wait for the reading to stabilize
  4. Read at eye level

Non-Contact Thermometers:

Used during the COVID-19 pandemic — they measure temperature from a distance using infrared technology.


5. Laboratory Thermometers

Laboratory thermometers are different from clinical ones:

FeatureClinicalLaboratory
Range35°C to 42°C-10°C to 110°C
LiquidMercury/AlcoholAlcohol or mercury
UseBody temperature onlyScience experiments
KinkPresentAbsent

Safety:

  • Handle with care — they are fragile
  • Never use a clinical thermometer for boiling water — it will break!

6. Different Temperature Scales

While Celsius (°C) is commonly used, other scales exist:

  • Fahrenheit (°F) — used in some countries like the USA. Water freezes at 32°F, boils at 212°F
  • Kelvin (K) — the scientific (SI) unit. 0 K is absolute zero (−273.15°C), the coldest possible temperature

The chapter introduces these scales so students understand that temperature can be expressed in different ways.


7. Recording and Analysing Temperature Data

Students are encouraged to:

  • Record daily maximum and minimum air temperatures over 10 days
  • Observe patterns — which days are warmer, which are cooler
  • Understand the importance of air temperature in weather reports

8. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDescription
TemperatureA measure of how hot or cold something is
Celsius (°C)Water freezes at 0°C, boils at 100°C
Clinical ThermometerFor body temperature (35°C–42°C), has a kink
Laboratory ThermometerFor experiments (−10°C to 110°C), no kink
Normal Body Temp37.0°C

9. Important Vocabulary

  • Temperature: A measure of hotness or coldness of an object
  • Thermometer: An instrument used to measure temperature
  • Celsius Scale: Temperature scale where water freezes at 0°C and boils at 100°C
  • Clinical Thermometer: Thermometer designed to measure body temperature
  • Laboratory Thermometer: Thermometer for experimental use with a wider range

10. Worked Questions

Q: Why can't we rely on touch to judge temperature accurately? Our sense of touch is relative. The same lukewarm water feels warm to a cold hand and cold to a warm hand. We need a thermometer for an objective, accurate measurement.

Q: What happens if you use a clinical thermometer to measure boiling water? The clinical thermometer's range is only up to 42°C. Boiling water at 100°C will cause the liquid inside to expand rapidly and the thermometer will break.

Q: What is normal human body temperature? Normal human body temperature is about 37.0°C (98.6°F). It can vary slightly — a reading above 38°C generally indicates fever.


11. Conclusion

Temperature and its Measurement teaches students that science relies on precise instruments, not just human senses. The chapter builds practical skills (how to read a thermometer), scientific concepts (Celsius scale, different thermometer types), and data analysis habits (recording and interpreting temperature data) — all essential for future science education.

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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
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Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
Why does the clinical thermometer have a kink?
Show solution
The kink prevents the mercury/alcohol from falling back immediately after the thermometer is removed from the mouth. This allows the doctor to read the temperature at their convenience.
Q2MEDIUM
A student touches a metal table and a wooden book — the metal feels colder. Are they at different temperatures?
Show solution
No, both are at room temperature. Metal feels colder because it conducts heat away from your hand faster than wood does. This is another example of why touch can be deceptive.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Temperature = measure of hotness/coldness. Unit: °C
  • Water: freezes at 0°C, boils at 100°C. Body: 37.0°C
  • Clinical thermometer: 35–42°C, kink present, for body
  • Lab thermometer: −10 to 110°C, no kink, for experiments
  • Touch is unreliable — demonstrated by three-bowl activity
  • Digital and non-contact (infrared) thermometers are modern alternatives

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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