Home / Series / Bill Nye: The Science Guy / Aired Order / Season 2 / Episode 10

Heat

Things sure are heating up at Nye Labs. Snow cones, flowers, hot dogs, people -- everything is made of molecules. No matter what they're in, solid, liquid, or gas, molecules are always moving, even if just a little bit. The speed of the molecules depends on their temperature. Cold things have slow-moving molecules, while hot things have fast-moving molecules. In fact, temperature is really a measurement of molecule speed. For a cold thing to get warm, its molecules have to speed up. Heat moves in three different ways -- conduction, convection, and radiation. Conduction is the flow of heat between two solid objects that are touching. Heat conducts from your warm fingertips into a cold can of soda. Convection is the transfer of heat with a liquid or gas. A hot bath feels warm all over not just where you're sitting. Convection also happens naturally. When air gets warmed by a hot burner, it's molecules speed up and spread out. Then, cold air molecules squeeze the warm spread-out molecules

English
  • Originally Aired October 1, 1994
  • Runtime 25 minutes
  • Content Rating United States of America TV-Y
  • Production Code BN2-04
  • Network PBS
  • On Other Sites IMDB
  • Created July 10, 2011 by
    Administrator admin
  • Modified September 8, 2022 by
    brian5678