Starter track
Step 1 of 40 / 4 completeThermodynamics and Kinetic Theory
Next after this: Ideal Gas Law and Kinetic Theory.
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Concept module
Compare average particle motion with whole-sample energy, vary amount and heating, and see why a phase-change shelf breaks naive temperature-only reasoning on one compact thermal bench.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 1 of 40 / 4 completeNext after this: Ideal Gas Law and Kinetic Theory.
This concept is the track start.
Why it behaves this way
Temperature and internal energy are related, but they are not the same thing. In this compact particle bench, temperature follows the average kinetic energy per particle, while internal energy counts the whole thermal story across the entire sample.
That means amount matters. Two samples can have the same temperature even though the larger sample stores more total internal energy because more particles are sharing that same average microscopic motion.
This is the bookkeeping underneath later heat transfer, specific heat, and phase-change ideas. Energy can enter a sample while temperature behaves in a less naive way because some of that added energy can go into changing internal stores instead of only speeding particles up.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans18
2.4 arb
1.8 u
16.2 u
1. Read the per-particle thermal scale
2. Turn that per-particle scale into a total thermal part
3. Add the bond and phase store
Thermal total and internal total
Common misconception
If two samples have the same temperature, they must contain the same amount of internal energy.
Equal temperature only tells you that their average microscopic kinetic energy per particle is similar.
The larger sample can still have much more total internal energy because more particles and internal stores are contributing to the total.
Mini challenge
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Quick test
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Question 1 of 5
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Accessibility
The simulation shows a bounded particle box on the left and a thermal-state card on the right. The particle box uses moving dots to show average microscopic motion, while chips and horizontal bars summarize particle count, temperature, internal energy, and any phase-shelf progress.
The same sample state drives the graphs below the bench. One graph tracks temperature in time, another tracks the internal-energy bookkeeping, and two response graphs sweep particle count to compare whole-sample internal energy and temperature rise rate.
The model is intentionally simplified. It does not simulate real intermolecular forces or real substances in detail. It is a compact educational bench for separating temperature, amount of substance, heating rate, and a simple phase-change shelf without pretending to be a full thermodynamics engine.
Graph summary
The temperature-history graph shows how the current sample warms in time. A flat segment can still correspond to ongoing energy input, so it should be read together with the energy-breakdown graph and the shelf overlay.
The energy-breakdown graph tracks total internal energy, thermal kinetic energy, and the other internal store together. The amount-response graphs sweep only particle count, which makes them the cleanest way to compare same-temperature samples or to see why larger samples warm more slowly under the same heater.
Read next
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Connect pressure, volume, temperature, and particle number on one bounded particle box, then read the same pressure changes back as changes in particle speed and wall-collision rate.
See heat as energy transfer driven by temperature difference while conduction, convection, and radiation compete on one compact bench with honest pathway rates.
See why the same energy pulse changes different materials by different temperature amounts, and why a phase-change shelf can absorb or release energy without changing temperature on one compact thermal bench.