A very hot object has more energy available for light than does the same object when cold.
You touch a hot object and immediately drop it or withdraw your hand from the heat source.
A hot object will add energy to the wind.
Thermal insulation is used to slow down heat loss from a hot object to its environment.
One accepted source is frequent, long-term application of hot objects to the body.
She also frightens children and can handle very hot objects with her bare hands.
A hot solid object produces light with a continuous spectrum.
Contact with hot objects is the cause of about 20-30% of burns in children.
That was consistent with a hot object with no features.
This is why one can so easily feel the radiant heat from hot objects at a distance.