Speaker 2
So what happens as it gets absorbed by the molecule, and that energy becomes energy in the molecule. And that molecule, or atom, jiggles more. And that jiggling is what we feel as heat. Because that giggling can then be transferred by confection into our skin, and we feel that is as the heat. So the photons aren't there any more. They they become, they are always energy, and they, their energy gets transferred into a different form, which is the jiggling of atoms and molecules, which is the thing that we feel as heat. Heat is just speed of molecules, which is wild and does not make intuitive sense, but eventually, if you say it enough times, you start to believe it.
Speaker 1
So, and to break this down, again, as a lay person, as as as as some one who, you know, made the decision for reasons, you know, that we don't need to go into here, but to to study humanity's rather than the, rather than the hard sciences, what whatsens. Your saying is that these, these articles of clothing eat photons. They eat them, and then they get lots of energy from them. That's what i'm hearing in mya e. So yet
Speaker 2
to they're more, they're full, and theyre
Speaker 1
have to, they're going to have to go to the bathroom soon. It's like when my nephew gets his hand on a fruit sneck that we didn't know was out somewhere where he could get it. And then he eats that, and then he jiggles, and actually does become quite hot to the touch.
Speaker 2
Yes. Then there's a lot of jiggling. There's nothing like, nothing like a nephew on a fruits neck,
Speaker 1
yes? Or giggle fruit for the giggles, actly. M, well, that's wild. So now that so so, light turns into heat as it gets as that energy gets aa, turneds as that energy is created. And then is there a reverse process by which heat gets turned into light? Like, for example, if we had, if we had a goth on a hot summer's day out in the w could he, could that goth become so uncomfortably hot that they began to emit light? He ha, he