The air gets trapped in the hollow bricks and air is a poor conductor of heat. This trapped air acts as an insulator and prevent the heat from entering the house, keeping the interior cooler.
Key Concepts Covered
This question tests your understanding of the following concepts from the chapter Heat Transfer in Nature: Hollow, Bricks, Construct, Outer, Walls, Houses. These are fundamental topics in Science that students are expected to master as part of the CBSE Class 7 curriculum.
A thorough understanding of these concepts will help you answer similar questions confidently in your CBSE examinations. These topics are frequently tested in both objective and subjective sections of Science papers. We recommend revising the relevant section of your textbook alongside practising these solved examples to build a strong foundation.
How to Approach This Question
Read the question carefully and identify what is being asked. Break down complex questions into smaller parts. Use the terminology and concepts discussed in this chapter. Structure your answer logically — begin with a definition or key statement, then provide supporting details. Review your answer to ensure it addresses all parts of the question completely.
Key Points to Remember
- Read the question carefully and identify all parts before answering.
- Use the terminology specific to this subject and chapter.
- Review the textbook content for this chapter before attempting questions.
- Practice writing concise, well-structured answers within time limits.
Practice more questions from Heat Transfer in Nature — Science, Class 7 CBSE
Chapter 3: Heat
Heat is a form of energy that flows from hot to cold. Temperature measures hotness/coldness. Clinical thermometer (35-42 degrees C, has kink) and laboratory thermometer (-10 to 110 degrees C, no kink) are used for measurement. Heat transfers by conduction (solids), convection (liquids/gases), and radiation (no medium needed). Dark surfaces absorb more heat; light surfaces reflect more.
Theme: Physics | Difficulty: Age-appropriate for Class VII
Key Formulas & Equations
| Formula / Equation | When to Use |
|---|---|
| Normal body temperature = 37°C | Reference value |
| Clinical range: 35°C – 42°C | For body temperature only |
| Lab thermometer range: −10°C to 110°C | For experiments |
Must-Know Concepts
- Heat is energy (joules); temperature is degree of hotness (°C)
- Clinical thermometer has a kink; lab thermometer does not
- Conduction: heat in solids (metals are conductors, wood/plastic are insulators)
- Convection: heat in liquids/gases by particle movement (sea breeze, land breeze)
- Radiation: heat without medium (Sun to Earth through vacuum)
- Dark clothes absorb heat; light clothes reflect heat
- Wool traps air (insulator), does not produce heat
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Confusing heat with temperature
- Thinking metals are "cold" — they conduct heat away from hand quickly
- Thinking wool generates heat — it only traps body heat
- Believing radiation needs a medium
Scoring Tips
- Compare clinical and lab thermometer in a table
- Draw sea breeze and land breeze diagrams with arrows
- Give 2 examples each of conduction, convection, radiation