Childrens Illustrated Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

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Atoms and molecules
Earth
Engines
Science
Stars
Sun
Volcanoes

Sweating and Shivering
Your body usually has a steady temperature
of 98.6°F (37°C). It automatically keeps
you from getting too hot or
too cold. Sweating cools
you down if you get too
hot. Shivering helps
to warm you up when
you get too cold. Hairs
on your skin stand up when
your body gets cold and
help to trap a layer of air
around the skin, which
stops heat loss.

Drops of sweat
evaporate, which
cools the skin.

FAHrEnHEIt
temperatures marked with
an “F” are recorded using the
Fahrenheit scale of temperature.
In the Fahrenheit scale, water
freezes at 32°F and boils at 212°F.
A few countries, including
the United States, use
the Fahrenheit scale.

Aluminum
melts,
1,220°F
(660°C)

Water
boils,
212°F
(100°C)

Normal
body
temperature,
98.6°F
(37°C)

Water
freezes,
32°F (0°C)

Oxygen
becomes
liquid,
-360°F
(-218°C)

Absolute
zero,
-460°F
(-273°C)

tHErmomEtEr
A thermometer is an instrument that measures temperature. A digital
thermometer has a display that shows the temperature in numbers.
Glass thermometers contain a thin column of mercury (a liquid
metal) or colored alcohol that expands and
rises in the thermometer as the
temperature increases.

Digital display
accurately records
temperature
within one-tenth
of a degree.

AbSolUtE zEro
the lowest temperature of
all is called absolute zero.
At absolute zero, -460°F
(-273°C), molecules stop
moving. Scientists have
cooled substances almost
to absolute zero, but the
exact temperature can
never be reached.

Column of
colored
alcohol

Level of
column
indicates
temperature
against scale.

rEFrIGErAtor
When liquids evaporate (change
into a gas), they take heat from
their surroundings. In a
refrigerator, a liquid circulates,
going through a cycle of
evaporation and condensation
(changing back into a liquid
again). As the liquid evaporates,
it takes heat from the food in
the refrigerator.

CElSIUS
temperatures
marked with a “C” are
recorded in the Celsius
(also called Centigrade)
scale of temperature. In this scale,
water freezes at 0°C and boils at
100°C. Scientists and most countries
of the world use the Celsius scale.

Shivering makes
muscles move and
produce heat.

tEmpErAtUrE
temperature is a measure of how hot an object
is. A hot object has a higher temperature than
a cold object. When objects are extremely
cold, they have negative
temperatures: a minus
sign indicates how many
degrees the temperature
is below zero on the
temperature scale.

expanSion and contraction
most things expand (get slightly larger) when they get hot.
they contract (shrink) again when they cool. this happens
because the molecules inside an object make larger, more rapid
vibrations as the object heats up. the molecules therefore take
up more space, causing the object to expand. the Golden Gate
bridge in San Francisco expands by up to 3 ft (0.9 m) in the
summer months because of the hotter weather.

Heat is
taken from
air inside the
refrigerator.

Electric pump
forces liquid around pipes
inside refrigerator.

Vapor changes
back to liquid in
condenser, and
continues its
cycle around the
refrigerator.

Surrounding
cool air outside
the refrigerator
removes heat.

When vapor
condenses back
into a liquid, it gives
out heat to the air
around the
condenser.

Liquid changes to
vapor in evaporator
by taking heat from
inside the refrigerator
and cooling it.

Heat

Center of
the sun,
about
27 million°F
(15 million°C)

Center
of Earth,
about
8,100°F
(4,500°C)

US_252_Heat_2.indd 252 21/01/16 5:00 pm
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