Heat and Energy

Introduction

Heat is a form of energy that flows from a hotter body to a colder body. Understanding heat transfer, temperature measurement, and energy sources is essential for ICSE Class 9 Physics.

Heat vs Temperature

PropertyHeatTemperature
DefinitionForm of energyMeasure of hotness/coldness
UnitJoule (J) or calorie (cal)Kelvin (K), Celsius (°C), Fahrenheit (°F)
NatureTotal energy of molecular motionAverage kinetic energy of molecules
FlowFlows from hot to coldDetermines direction of heat flow

Specific Heat Capacity

The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of a substance by 1 K or 1°C.

Q = m × c × ΔT

Where Q = heat energy (J), m = mass (kg), c = specific heat capacity (J/kg·K), ΔT = temperature change (K)

<h4>Example</h4> <p>How much heat is required to raise the temperature of 2 kg of water from 20°C to 50°C? (c = 4200 J/kg·K)</p> <p>Q = 2 × 4200 × 30 = 252,000 J</p>

Anomalous Expansion of Water

Unlike most liquids, water exhibits anomalous expansion between 0°C and 4°C.

Behaviour:

  • Water contracts when cooled from 4°C to 0°C (unusual)
  • Water expands when heated from 0°C to 4°C (unusual)
  • Water has maximum density at 4°C

Importance:

  • Ponds and lakes freeze from top to bottom
  • Aquatic life survives winter in liquid water below the ice
  • The layer at 4°C stays at the bottom (densest) and provides a habitat

Thermometers

Clinical Thermometer

  • Range: 35°C to 42°C (or 94°F to 108°F)
  • Used to measure human body temperature
  • Contains a constriction (kink) to prevent mercury from falling back
  • Normal human body temperature: 37°C or 98.6°F

Laboratory Thermometer

  • Range: -10°C to 110°C
  • Used for general laboratory experiments
  • No constriction (mercury falls back when not in use)

Digital Thermometer

  • Uses electronic sensors
  • Quick reading
  • No mercury (safer)

Energy Sources

Renewable Energy Sources

SourceDescriptionAdvantages
SolarEnergy from sunlightClean, abundant, free
WindEnergy from wind turbinesClean, no fuel cost
HydroEnergy from flowing waterReliable, long-lasting
GeothermalHeat from Earths interiorContinuous, clean
TidalEnergy from ocean tidesPredictable, renewable

Non-Renewable Energy Sources

SourceDescriptionDisadvantages
CoalFossil fuel from plant remainsLimited, polluting, CO₂ emissions
PetroleumFossil fuel from marine organismsLimited, pollution, oil spills
Natural gasFossil fuelLimited, greenhouse gas emission
NuclearEnergy from nuclear fissionRadioactive waste, accident risk
<h4>Comparison</h4> <p>Renewable sources are sustainable and environmentally friendly but may be less reliable or more expensive. Non-renewable sources are energy-dense but finite and polluting.</p>

Common Mistakes With Fixes

MistakeCorrection
Heat and temperature are the sameHeat is energy; temperature is average kinetic energy
Water always expands when heatedWater between 0°C - 4°C contracts when heated
Clinical thermometer range is -10 to 110Clinical: 35-42°C, Laboratory: -10 to 110°C
All energy sources are unlimitedFossil fuels are finite; only renewable sources are sustainable

ICSE Exam Focus

TopicMarks (approx.)Frequency
Anomalous expansion of water3-4 marksVery common
Heat vs temperature2-3 marksCommon
Thermometers (clinical vs laboratory)3 marksCommon
Renewable vs non-renewable energy3-4 marksFrequently asked

Self-Test

Q1: Distinguish between heat and temperature.

Q2: Explain why water pipes burst in cold countries during winter.

Q3: What is the normal human body temperature in Celsius and Fahrenheit?

Q4: Calculate the heat required to raise 500 g of water from 10°C to 60°C. (c = 4200 J/kg·K)

Q5: List three renewable and three non-renewable sources of energy.

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