I Want 2 Study
Physics / Thermal Physics

logo-image:

Explore Index as an interactive EJS simulation for thermal physics.

logo-image: preview image

1. Watch or Launch

Teacher Demonstration

Use the live model as a shared screen demonstration before students try their own predictions and observations.

Launch the Interactive

Open the simulation, adjust the controls, and compare what changes on screen before answering the concept-check questions.

Launch Interactive

2. Big Ideas

Key idea Heat transfer depends on temperature difference, mass, material, and specific heat capacity. Heating and cooling simulations let students compare heat gain, heat loss, boiling, and material response using graph or numerical evidence.

What Students Can Learn

  • Track energy transfer from hotter to cooler objects.
  • Use mass, specific heat capacity, and temperature change to explain differences.
  • Read heating or cooling curves for changing temperature and plateaus.
  • Distinguish heat energy transferred from temperature itself.

Guiding Question

Which object gains or loses thermal energy, and what evidence shows how mass, material, or temperature difference matters?

3. Try the Investigation

Identify the System

Name the hot object, cold object, and surroundings before reading the graph or values.

Compare Materials or Masses

Change one material or mass setting and observe the temperature change.

Use the Curve

Look for slope changes or plateaus that show heating, cooling, boiling, or heat exchange.

Explain Energy Accounting

Relate the observed changes to heat gain, heat loss, mass, and specific heat capacity.

4. Teacher Notes

Lesson Use

Use this for energy-accounting talk rather than simple hotter-colder descriptions. Students should say which object loses energy, which gains energy, and what evidence supports that claim.

Discussion Prompts

Ask: Why do different materials warm at different rates? Where did the thermal energy go? Which graph region shows a large or small temperature change?

Teaching Moves

Use a predict-observe-explain routine with two materials or masses. Require students to connect their observation to mass or specific heat capacity, not only to final temperature.

5. Concept Check

These questions are generated from the topic and the concept illustrated by the simulation. Use them after students have explored the model.

Concept Score

Correct first attempts build a streak and unlock higher point multipliers on this device.

0page points
0current streak
x1multiplier
0best streak
Answer each question once to build your streak.

1. What is the central idea in heat-transfer simulations?

2. When two substances are compared, what should students consider?

3. What does a heating or boiling graph help show?

4. Why use controlled comparisons?

5. What makes a strong claim?

7. Learning Pulse

Anonymous activity counts show that this resource is being discovered and used.

--currently viewing
--total page views
Updating anonymous page activity...