In
thermal physics,
thermal energy is the
energy portion of a
system that increases with its
temperature. In a loose sense, "thermal energy" is a term often used to describe the energy content of a system related to
heating effects, for example temperature increase or decrease. In
thermodynamics, thermal energy is the
internal energy present in a system in a state of
thermodynamic equilibrium by virtue of its temperature. The term isn't widely used, however, in a rigorous sense, owing to the result that the phrase "thermal (
heat) energy" is counter-intuitive. That is,
heat can only be defined as any spontaneous
flow of energy (energy in transit) from one object to another, caused by a difference in temperature between two objects; thus, an object can't posess "heat". This is explained by the
second law of thermodynamics. Hence, by extrapolation, it's difficult to define quantities of heat energy (thermal energy). In isolated cases, however, a few definitions do exist.
Internal energy
Internal energy – the sum of all microscopic forms of energy of a system. It is related to the molecular structure and the degree of molecular activity and may be viewed as the sum of kinetic and potential energies of the molecules; it's comprised of the following types of energies:
Definitions
System of N particles
According to the
equipartition theorem, it's possible to define thermal energy. In a system of
N molecules, each with f degrees of freedom, and if there are no other (non-quadratic) temperature-dependent forms of energy, then the total thermal energy of the system is:
Thermal energy is the difference between the
internal energy of an object and the amount that it would have at
absolute zero. It includes the quantity of
kinetic energy due to the motion of the internal particles of an object, and is increased by
heating and reduced by
cooling.
In a
monatomic ideal gas, the thermal energy is exactly given by the kinetic energy of the constituent particles.
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