☀️ P3/P4 · PSLE Topic

Light and Heat Energy

Light and heat energy explained for PSLE Science. Reflection, conduction, convection, radiation — with Singapore examples, practical applications, and exam tips for P3/P4 students.

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Syllabus
P3/P4 · PSLE
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Reading time
8 minutes
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Exam weight
High — often tested
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Key skill
Apply + explain

Light Travels Straight; Heat Travels Three Ways

Light is a form of energy that travels in straight lines from its source. It moves incredibly fast (300,000 km per second) and does not need a medium — it can travel through a vacuum. When light hits an object, one of three things happens: it is reflected (bounced back), absorbed (taken in and converted to heat), or transmitted (passes through).

Heat energy is different — it cannot move through empty space the same way all the time. Depending on the material and situation, heat transfers in three distinct ways: conduction (through solids, particle by particle), convection (through liquids and gases, by moving currents), and radiation (through any medium including vacuum, as infrared waves).

Light and Heat in Singapore's Environment

HDB flat colours: White or light-coloured HDB flats reflect more sunlight and absorb less heat, keeping the interior cooler. Dark-coloured walls absorb more light energy and convert it to heat — this is why black surfaces feel hotter to the touch in the sun.

Metal railings on void decks: On a sunny Singapore afternoon, these become almost too hot to touch. Metal is an excellent conductor — heat from sunlight is conducted rapidly through the metal structure. Meanwhile, the wooden benches nearby feel much cooler because wood is a poor conductor (insulator).

Sea breezes at East Coast Park: Classic convection. Land heats up faster than the sea during the day, so air over the land becomes warmer, less dense, and rises. Cooler sea air rushes in horizontally to replace it — that is the sea breeze you feel. At night, the land cools faster, reversing the pattern.

Singapore's heat from the sun: The sun is 150 million kilometres away — there is no solid or liquid medium between the sun and Earth. Heat from the sun reaches us entirely by radiation (infrared waves). Conduction and convection cannot operate across the vacuum of space.

What Light Does When It Hits Things

How Reflection Works

When light hits a smooth, shiny surface (like a mirror), it reflects at the same angle it arrived. The angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection — both measured from an imaginary line perpendicular to the surface (the normal).

Rough surfaces also reflect light, but the surface is made up of thousands of tiny angled surfaces, so the reflected light scatters in many directions. This is why a rough wall doesn't show your reflection even though it does reflect light.

Conduction, Convection, and Radiation

MethodHow it worksWhere it occursSingapore example
ConductionHeat passes from particle to particle through direct contact — vibrating particles transfer energy to neighboursSolids (best); very slow in liquids/gasesHot wok handle; metal railing in sun
ConvectionHeated fluid becomes less dense and rises; cooler fluid sinks to replace it, creating a circulating currentLiquids and gases onlySea breeze; boiling water; air conditioning
RadiationHeat is emitted as infrared electromagnetic waves — requires no mediumAny medium, including vacuumHeat from the sun; warmth felt near a fire

Good and Poor Conductors of Heat

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A thermos flask uses multiple principles: the vacuum between the double walls stops conduction and convection; the silvered (shiny) inner surface reflects radiation back in; the insulating stopper stops conduction at the top.

Why Does Dark Colour Absorb More Heat?

When light hits a surface, the surface absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others. A white surface reflects almost all wavelengths of visible light — that reflected energy never gets converted to heat. A black surface absorbs almost all wavelengths — all that energy is converted to heat within the surface. This is why a black car parked in the sun becomes far hotter inside than a white car on the same day.

This principle has enormous practical importance in Singapore's tropical climate: white or reflective roofing materials, light-coloured building facades, and tree shade all reduce the Urban Heat Island effect that makes Singapore's city centre hotter than surrounding areas.

Common Mistakes

Trap 1 — Convection in solids
Convection only occurs in fluids (liquids and gases). Solids cannot form convection currents because their particles cannot flow past each other. Heat in solids transfers by conduction only.
Trap 2 — The sun heats Earth by conduction
WRONG — there is a vacuum between the sun and Earth, so conduction and convection are impossible. Heat from the sun reaches Earth exclusively by radiation.
Trap 3 — Shiny surfaces only reflect light
Shiny surfaces also reflect heat radiation (infrared). This is why emergency blankets (space blankets) are shiny — they reflect your body's infrared radiation back towards you to keep you warm.

Key Points at a Glance

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Related PSLE Topics

These topics are closely linked in the PSLE syllabus.