Heat and Heat Transfer Methods
99 Introduction to Heat and Heat Transfer Methods

Energy appears in many forms, but one of the most pervasive in biology and health science is heat. Unlike other energy types, heat only exists during energy transfer and is always associated with movement—either of particles, waves, or thermal gradients. Heat transfer plays a critical role in processes ranging from cellular metabolism to weather systems and global climate dynamics.
For example, the chilling effect of nighttime air is not just due to cold temperatures but also to rapid radiative heat loss from the body to the atmosphere. On a much larger scale, Earth’s interior should have cooled long ago were it not for continuous heating from radioactive decay. Both of these phenomena can be explained using the physics of heat transfer.
This chapter explores the mechanisms by which heat is transferred—conduction, convection, and radiation—and their effects on biological and environmental systems. These principles help us understand everything from the design of medical thermal devices to the behavior of the Earth’s climate system.