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Bill Nye, the Science Guy
Movement of Heat
00:00 - 01:54

Bill Nye explains that heat is energy and can be used to do work, such as keep up warm, run an engine, or affect other molecules. Using real-world examples, he then describes the three ways that heat can move from one place to another: conduction, convection, and radiation.

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Video Transcript

0:00
because without heat through the cold
0:04
I
0:04
mean
0:04
we knew inflatable moon like this
0:10
you're filling it with warm air
0:14
you'd find a balloon like
0:16
you're filling it
0:17
with high
0:20
he needs
0:21
this
0:21
energy
0:22
so
0:23
he
0:23
can do work
0:25
he keeps a saloon
0:27
heat makes
0:28
engines run
0:29
and he
0:30
can affect molecules
0:32
watch
0:33
we're changing solid ice
0:35
into liquid water
0:39
you hungry
0:42
there you go
0:42
bank
0:44
moves around the universe
0:46
right away
0:47
most are going to the party universe we call being yeah
0:50
kitchen
0:51
then please
0:52
heart
0:52
touching
0:53
this hot griddle
0:54
so he
0:55
can go directly from the griddle
0:57
into
0:58
print
0:58
better
0:59
fast enough
1:00
turn the batter
1:01
into a dry
1:03
school
1:05
pinching
1:07
here we have
1:08
rules
1:09
clicking over
1:10
oiling what
1:13
all the way through
1:14
through his doggone good on
1:17
stealing makes
1:19
this is called
1:20
convection
1:21
he
1:23
here we have a flight
1:24
gross of martial
1:26
the flame
1:27
crops the marshmallows
1:29
without
1:29
anything
1:30
touching anything
1:33
this is called
1:34
radiation
1:35
for those of the three ways that he
1:36
moves around the universe
1:38
adoption
1:40
conduction
1:41
of heat
1:42
your question
1:43
convection
1:45
and radiation
1:47
radiation
1:50
not
1:52
Marshall Fritz
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