eli5 how my hand can melt car window frost from the other side?

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When a cars windows are coated in frost, there is this weird phenomenon where you can place your hand on the opposite side (side without frost), leave it for a few seconds, and when you take your hand away you can slowly watch the ice melt. It’s hard to explain, but I hope someone knows what I’m talking about. I used to think it was something to do with the sunlight reflecting off my palm, but I was doing it last night

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12 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your body is a highly efficient oven, keeping you warm. When you put your hand on the glass, the hand warms up the glass a bit which in turn warms the ice up. This can be enough for the ice to melt.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your hand warms the glass on your side. The heat takes a bit of time to travel through the glass, so even though you’ve pulled your hand away, the heat from the initial hold time is still moving through. So long as it’s not too cold out, that heat will be enough to warm the exterior glass to a high enough temperature to melt the ice.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your body is a highly efficient oven, keeping you warm. When you put your hand on the glass, the hand warms up the glass a bit which in turn warms the ice up. This can be enough for the ice to melt.

Anonymous 0 Comments

OP are you actually 5?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your hand warms the glass on your side. The heat takes a bit of time to travel through the glass, so even though you’ve pulled your hand away, the heat from the initial hold time is still moving through. So long as it’s not too cold out, that heat will be enough to warm the exterior glass to a high enough temperature to melt the ice.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your body is a highly efficient oven, keeping you warm. When you put your hand on the glass, the hand warms up the glass a bit which in turn warms the ice up. This can be enough for the ice to melt.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your hand warms the glass on your side. The heat takes a bit of time to travel through the glass, so even though you’ve pulled your hand away, the heat from the initial hold time is still moving through. So long as it’s not too cold out, that heat will be enough to warm the exterior glass to a high enough temperature to melt the ice.

Anonymous 0 Comments

OP are you actually 5?

Anonymous 0 Comments

OP are you actually 5?

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’m really struggling to u decipher what OP is asking.. hand is warm, window is cold. Cold things absorb heat; heat melts frost.