How does wearing a hat keep you warm (or cool)?

How does wearing a hat keep you warm (or cool)?

First, a hat serves as insulation against convective heat transfer. By trapping a layer of air near your skin, it slows the movement of air and heat away from your head. But it also acts as a barrier to thermal radiation. Just as a tree overhead radiates heat toward your skin and keeps you from losing heat to the dark night sky, the hat on your head radiates heat toward you and helps to keep you warm. On a sunny day, it keeps you cool by blocking the direct transfer of heat from the sun to your head.

If metal is a conductor of heat, why is it that aluminum foil will insulate food…

If metal is a conductor of heat, why is it that aluminum foil will insulate food and reflect heat?

Aluminum may be a good conductor of heat, but its a terrible emitter or absorber of thermal radiation. When you wrap food in aluminum foil, you dramatically reduce that food’s ability to lose heat via radiation if it’s hotter than its surroundings or its ability to gain heat via radiation if it’s colder than its surroundings. Aluminum foil doesn’t have much effect on heat transferred to or from the food via conduction or convection because aluminum itself is a good conductor of heat.