Thermal Physics A

Overview

Thermal Physics A studies the macroscopic behaviour of heat and temperature. It focuses on how substances gain or lose thermal energy, how temperature is measured, and how heating can cause temperature rise or change of state.

This topic comes before microscopic kinetic theory and later thermodynamics.

For the kinetic-theory and thermodynamics continuation, see Thermal Physics B.

Core ideas include:

  • temperature and thermal equilibrium
  • thermometric properties
  • Celsius and Kelvin scales
  • absolute zero
  • heat capacity and specific heat capacity
  • calorimetry and mixing
  • latent heat
  • heating curves
  • electrical determination of thermal quantities

Core Ideas

Thermal Physics A can be organised around three recurring ideas:

  1. Temperature determines the direction of thermal energy transfer and can be measured through suitable thermometric properties.
  2. Energy supplied to a substance may either change its temperature or change its state.
  3. Thermal calculations are usually energy-accounting questions, so clear distinction between processes matters.

Exam Relevance

This topic is heavily tested through formula choice, multi-stage heating logic, and practical interpretation. Most errors come from mixing up temperature change with phase change, or from using correct equations under the wrong assumptions about heat loss and equilibrium.

Temperature, Heat and Internal Energy

Temperature

Temperature indicates the degree of hotness of a body. It determines the direction of thermal energy transfer.

If two objects are placed in contact:

  • heat flows from higher temperature to lower temperature
  • flow continues until both reach the same temperature

Heat

Heat is energy transferred because of temperature difference.

Heat is not something stored inside an object. Once transferred, it becomes part of the object’s internal energy.

Internal Energy

Internal energy is the total microscopic energy stored in a substance, including:

  • random kinetic energy of particles
  • intermolecular potential energy

Thermal Equilibrium

Two bodies are in thermal equilibrium when:

  • they are at the same temperature
  • there is no net heat transfer between them

This is the basis of temperature measurement.

Thermometric Properties

A thermometric property is a physical property that changes with temperature and can be used to measure temperature.

Examples:

  • length of metal strip
  • volume of liquid
  • gas pressure
  • electrical resistance

Good Thermometric Property

Should be:

  • measurable
  • sensitive to temperature change
  • reproducible
  • approximately linear over the range used
  • stable and reliable

Measurement Scales

The traditional Celsius scale uses:

  • ice point = (0^\circ\mathrm{C})
  • steam point = (100^\circ\mathrm{C})

If thermometer property is (x):

  • (x_0) at ice point
  • (x_{100}) at steam point
  • unknown reading (x)

Then:

General calibration form:

See Thermal Measurement and Scales.

Kelvin Scale and Absolute Zero

The Kelvin scale is an absolute thermodynamic scale.

Conversion:

Examples:

  • (0^\circ\mathrm{C}=273.15\ \mathrm{K})
  • (100^\circ\mathrm{C}=373.15\ \mathrm{K})

Absolute zero is:

At absolute zero:

  • substances have minimum internal energy

Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics

If:

  • A is in thermal equilibrium with C
  • B is in thermal equilibrium with C

Then:

  • A is in thermal equilibrium with B

This law justifies the use of thermometers.

Heat Capacity and Specific Heat Capacity

Heat supplied to an object causing temperature rise:

Where:

  • (Q) = thermal energy supplied
  • (C) = heat capacity

Heat capacity is the thermal energy required to raise the temperature of an object by (1\mathrm{K}).

Unit:

For mass (m):

Where:

  • (c) = specific heat capacity

Specific heat capacity is the thermal energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of a substance by 1 K.

Unit:

See Heat Capacity and Latent Heat.

Calorimetry and Mixing

In insulated systems:

This is based on conservation of energy.

Typical uses:

  • hot metal placed in cold water
  • mixing liquids
  • final equilibrium temperature

Worked Example 1: Mixing

A (0.50\ \mathrm{kg}) block of metal at (100^\circ\mathrm{C}) is placed in water. Water gains (8400\ \mathrm{J}). Find heat lost by metal.

Since insulated:

Latent Heat

During melting or boiling:

  • temperature remains constant
  • energy changes molecular arrangement instead of kinetic energy

Formula

Where:

  • (m) = mass
  • (l) = specific latent heat

Unit:

Types of Specific Latent Heat

Fusion

Energy required per kg to convert:

  • solid (\rightarrow) liquid

at constant temperature.

Vaporisation

Energy required per kg to convert:

  • liquid (\rightarrow) gas

at constant temperature.

Usually:

because particles separate much more in gas state.

Heating Curves

Typical heating curve:

  1. solid warms
  2. melting plateau
  3. liquid warms
  4. boiling plateau
  5. gas warms

Interpretation

Sloping region:

  • temperature rises
  • use (Q=mc\Delta T)

Flat region:

  • temperature constant
  • use (Q=ml)

Worked Example 2: Melting Ice

How much energy to melt (0.20\ \mathrm{kg}) ice at (0^\circ\mathrm{C})?

Given:

Then:

Practical Methods Overview

Electrical heating supplies energy:

Where:

  • (I) = current
  • (V) = p.d.
  • (t) = time

For a solid metal block:

Hence:

For latent heat practicals:

with corrections for heat loss when needed.

See Thermal Practicals.

Worked Example 3: Heater Problem

A heater rated (1000\ \mathrm{W}) runs for 5 min.

Find energy supplied.

Formula Summary

Temperature Conversion

Heat Capacity

Specific Heat Capacity

Latent Heat

Electrical Heating

Electrical SHC Determination

Common Exam Pitfalls

1. Heat vs Temperature

Heat = transferred energy.
Temperature = measure of hotness.

2. Celsius vs Kelvin

Use Kelvin where absolute temperature is needed.

3. Forgetting Constant Temperature in Phase Change

During melting or boiling:

  • temperature does not rise

4. Wrong Units

Convert:

  • g to kg
  • min to s
  • kW to W

5. Heat Capacity vs Specific Heat Capacity

  • (C): whole object
  • (c): per kg

6. Assuming No Heat Loss Automatically

Only if stated insulated or negligible losses.

For a full checklist see Thermal Physics A Common Exam Traps.

Summary

Thermal Physics A is fundamentally about deciding what the supplied energy is doing:

  • setting thermal equilibrium and temperature scales
  • raising temperature
  • changing state
  • or being measured electrically in practical work

Strong performance comes from choosing the correct thermal model for each stage and keeping definitions precise.