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You still would not be talking about exchange of heat, so it still wouldn't be anything to do with the title of the thread.
What does it take to say that there is heat exchange in a process?
Certain forms of energy transfer are specifically excluded. Heat should not be thermodynamic work done on a system. Also there should not be a direct transfer of matter (which might have some internal energy) from one system to the other.
The mechanisms of energy transfer that define heat include conduction, through direct contact of immobile bodies, or through a wall or barrier that is impermeable to matter; or radiation between separated bodies; or friction due to isochoric mechanical or electrical or magnetic or gravitational work done by the surroundings on the system of interest.... ... (Convection might be included but Wikipedia choose to exclude it and argue that although it's an intermediate process, the ultimate flow of energy is achieved by conduction or radiation once the fluid has has been carried to a particular location).
Can you give some examples?
Heat conduction can be seen as near field radiation. It's extremely rare case for two ordinary objects to collide at atomic level.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 29/03/2022 04:48:42Heat conduction can be seen as near field radiation. It's extremely rare case for two ordinary objects to collide at atomic level.No. "Radiation" excludes energy transfer by collision conduction or convection. Words have very precise meanings in physics, which is why some of us despise priests, politicians and philosophers. And sloppy journalists.
Water and ice have very precise meanings in physics.
It's extremely rare case for two ordinary objects to collide at atomic level.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 29/03/2022 11:42:52Water and ice have very precise meanings in physics. Not if you are talking about a single molecule.That's part of the problem.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 29/03/2022 04:48:42It's extremely rare case for two ordinary objects to collide at atomic level.In the condensed phase (liquid, gas or dense SCF) they are already in contact.Even in the gas phase, collision frequencies are very high- GHz for ordinary air.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 29/03/2022 11:47:43Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 29/03/2022 11:42:52Water and ice have very precise meanings in physics. Not if you are talking about a single molecule.That's part of the problem.Is conduction have a precise meaning for a single molecule?
What's the maximum distance between two molecules where they are said to be still in contact?
What I wrote there is comparable to saying that ice is just frozen water.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 29/03/2022 11:42:52What I wrote there is comparable to saying that ice is just frozen water.No, it's very different. Ice is indeed one (actually several) macroscopic phase of an ensemble of H2O molecules, but radiation and conduction are entirely different phenomena.The rate of heat exchange between two bodies by conduction depends on the temperature difference Th - Tl. The rate of heat exchange by radiation depends on Th4 - Tl4.
Will we find abrupt change or discontinuity in the record?
At what point?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 30/03/2022 12:33:35Will we find abrupt change or discontinuity in the record? YesQuote from: hamdani yusuf on 30/03/2022 12:33:35At what point?When they touch.There will be a very sharp increase just before they actually touch- at the distance when electron tunnelling becomes significant.