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Heat intensity (how Hot is it) is measured by the objects Temperature in Degrees, Fahrenheit, Centigrade, or Kelvin. Heat content (energy) is most commonly measured in Calories.
Kelvin
Water temperature tells you how cold or hot the water is. If the water is hot, the heat indicates the kinetic energy of the water.
Heat is defined as the total kinetic energy of all the atoms and molecules that make up a substance.Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the individual atoms or molecules in a substance.
The effect of temperature change to the amount of heat content of the substance is called heat transfer. As heat increases, the temperature decreases.
Heat intensity (how Hot is it) is measured by the objects Temperature in Degrees, Fahrenheit, Centigrade, or Kelvin. Heat content (energy) is most commonly measured in Calories.
Both of those individual temperature scales can be used to indicate heat.
The difference between heat and temperature is that heat is the amount of energy given off by a piece of matter, and Specific Heat indicates the amount of heat necessary to change 1g of something by 1 degree. Temperature measures change in heat.
The heat index combines air temperature and relative humidity to determine how hot it feels outside.
The heat index combines air temperature and relative humidity to determine how hot it feels outside.
Heat is a form of energy, temperature is a point on an arbitary scale. A hot day is not the same temperature as a hot drink and that is not the same temperature as a hot oven. The temperatures 20C, 68F, 293K and 528Ra are all the same temperature on different scales.