The temperature of a system is proportional to the average internal kinetic energy and potential energy per atom or molecule (whichever is the appropriate building block for the system's material). The details of that relationship depend on the type of atom or molecule and the interactions among the atoms in the material. Temperature is not a direct measure of a system's total thermal energy. The total thermal energy (sometimes called the total internal energy) of a system depends jointly on the temperature, the total number of atoms in the system, and the state of the material.
Standard detail
DCI.PS3.A.6-8.2
Depth 2Parent ID: E93323D0DFE60131C89168A86D17958EStandard set: Grades 6, 7, 8
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- DCI.PS3.A.6-8.2
- List ID
- •
- Standard ID
- E933EDE0DFE60131C89368A86D17958E
- ASN identifier
- S2471216
- Subject
- Science
- Grades
- 06, 07, 08
- Ancestor IDs
- E93323D0DFE60131C89168A86D17958EE9033B40DFE60131C81A68A86D17958E
- Source document
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US