The reason why

CHAPTER VII.

Chapter 71,125 wordsPublic domain

118. _Why does not a piece of wood which is turning at one end, feel hot at the other end?_

Because wood is _a bad conductor of heat_.

119. _Why is wood a bad conductor of heat?_

Because the arrangement of the particles of which it is composed does not favour the transmission of _caloric_.

120. _Why do some articles of clothing feel cold, and others warm?_

Because some are bad conductors of heat, _and do not draw off much of the warmth of our bodies_; while others are _better conductors_, and _take up a larger portion of our warmth_.

[Verse: "The fining pot is for silver, and the furnace for gold: but the Lord trieth the hearts."--PROVERBS XVII.]

121. _Which feels the warmer, the conductor or non-conductor?_

The non-conductor, as it does not readily _absorb_ the warmth of our bodies.

122. _What substances are the best conductors of heat?_

Gold, silver, copper, and most substances of close and hard formation, &c.

123. _What substances are the worst conductors of heat?_

Fur, eider down, feathers, raw silk, wood, lamp-black, cotton, soot, charcoal, &c.

124. _Why has the toasting-fork a wooden handle?_

Because wood is not _so good a conductor_ as metal, therefore the wood prevents the heat from being transmitted _by conduction_ to our hands.

125. _Why has the coffee-pot a wooden handle?_

Because the metal of the coffee-pot would otherwise _conduct the heat to the hand_; but wood, _being a bad conductor_, prevents it.

126. _Why does hot water in a metal jug feel hotter than in an earthenware one?_

Because metal, being a good conductor, _readily delivers heat to the hand_; but _earthenware, being an indifferent conductor_, parts with the heat slowly.

127. _How can we ascertain that wood prevents the conduction of heat to the hand?_

By passing the top of the finger along the wooden handle of the coffee-pot, until it reaches the point where the wood meets the metal. The wooden handle will be found to be _cool_, but the metal will feel _very hot_.

128. _Of what use are kettle-holders?_

Being made of _bad conductors_, such as wood, paper, or woollen cloth, they will not readily _conduct_ the heat from the kettle to the hand.

[Verse: "Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding."--PROVERBS IV.]

129. _Will a kettle-holder, being a bad conductor, sometimes conduct heat to the hand?_

Yes. But so slowly that the hand will not _feel the inconvenience of too much heat_.

130. _Why does hot metal feel hotter than heated wool, though they may both be of the same degree of temperature?_

Because metal gives out heat _more rapidly than wool_, by which it is made _more perceptible to our feelings_.

131. _Which would become cold first--the metal or the wool?_

The _wool_, because, although the metal conducts heat more rapidly, to a substance in contact with it, it does not _radiate heat_ as well as a _black and rough substance_.

132. _Why do iron articles feel intensely cold in winter?_

Because iron is one of the best conductors, and draws off heat from the hand very rapidly.

133. _What is the cause of the sensation called cold?_

When we feel cold, heat is being _drawn off from our bodies_.

134. _What is the cause of the sensation called heat?_

When we feel hot, our bodies are _absorbing heat_ from external causes.

The condition here implied is that of health, and of ordinary circumstances. A person in a condition of fever, suffering from intense heat arising from a diseased state of the blood, could not be said to be _absorbing heat_. Nor could such a description apply to a person who, by a very rapid walk, has raised the temperature of his body considerably above its natural state, by the _internal combustion_ which has already been described. A person feeling hot in bed, from excessive clothes, feels hot from the _development of heat internally_, which is not _conducted away_ with sufficient rapidity to maintain the natural temperature of the body.

135. _If a person, sitting before a fire-place, without a fire, were to set one foot upon a rug, and the other upon the stone hearth, which would feel the colder?_

The foot on the stone, because stone is a good conductor, and would _conduct the warmth of the foot away from it_.

[Verse: "The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein."--PSALM XXIV.]

136. _What does the hearth-stone do with the heat that it receives?_

It delivers it to the surrounding air, and to any other bodies with which it may be _in contact_--and as it parts with heat, _it takes up more from any body hotter than itself_.

137. _When there is no fire in a room, what is the relative temperature of the various things in the room?_

They are all of the same temperature.

138. _If all the articles in the room are of the same temperature, why do some feel colder than others?_

Because they differ in their relative powers of _conduction_. Those that are the best conductors feel coldest, as they convey away the heat of the hand most rapidly.

If you lay your hand upon the _woollen table cover_, or upon the _sleeve of your coat_ or mantle, it will feel _neither warm nor cold_, under ordinary circumstances. But if you raise your hand from the table cover, or coat, and lay it on the marble mantel piece, the mantel-piece will feel _cold_. If now you return your hand from the mantel-piece to the table cover or coat, _a sensation of warmth will become distinctly perceptible_. This will afford a good conception of the relative _powers of conduction of wool and marble_.

139. _How long does a substance feel cold or hot to the touch?_

Until it has brought the part touching it to the same temperature as itself.

140. _When do substances feel neither hot nor cold?_

When they are of the same temperature as our bodies.

141. _Why, under these circumstances, do they feel neither hot nor cold?_

Because they neither take heat from, nor supply it to, the body.

142. _Which would feel the warmer, when the fire was lighted, the hearth-rug or the hearth-stone?_

The hearth-stone, because it is a _good conductor_, and would not only _receive heat_ readily, but would _part with it as freely_ (thereby making its heat _perceptible_). But the hearth-rug, _being a bad conductor_, would part with its heat very slowly, and it would therefore be _less perceptible_.

[Verse: "Fire and hail; snow and vapour; stormy wind fulfilling his word."--PSALM CXLVIII.]

143. _Would the hearth-stone feel hotter than the hearth-rug though both were of the same temperature?_

It would feel _hotter than the hearth-rug_, because it would part with its heat so rapidly that it would be the _more perceptible_.

144. _But if the hearth-stone and the hearth-rug were both colder than the hand, which would feel the colder of the two?_

Then the hearth-stone would feel the colder, because, _being a good conductor_, it would _take heat_ from the hand more freely than the hearth-rug, which is a _bad conductor_.

145. _Why would the hearth-stone feel comparatively hotter in the one case, and colder in the other?_

Because, _being a good conductor_, it would conduct heat rapidly _to_ the hand when hot, and take heat rapidly _from_ the hand when cold.