How Metal Works
When you touch something cold, like a doorknob or a spoon, the metal pulls the heat out of your hand almost instantly. Your body feels that sudden loss of warmth as cold.
But why does it happen so fast?
Think about playing with blocks. If you have a big block and a small one, the small one gets warm faster because there's less stuff to heat up. Metal is like that small block, it’s good at taking in or giving out heat quickly.
So when you touch metal, it snatches your warmth really fast, making it feel cold, even if it's not actually very cold at all!
Ask a question
See also
- How Does France’s Darkest Hours: When the SS Publicly Executed Resistance Fighters Work?
- How To Use An Abacus?
- What do GPS and AGPS mean?
- What is 9 calories per gram?
- What is Temperatures between 60°C and 75°C?
Discussion
Recent activity
Categories: Science