Convection & Radiation
Convection only happens in fluids (liquids and gases), and it's responsible for heating your entire house, not just the bit next to the radiator. When you heat a fluid, something clever happens: the heated particles gain energy and spread out, becoming less dense than the cooler fluid around them.
This creates a natural cycle called a convection current. The warmer, less dense fluid rises up like a hot air balloon, whilst the cooler, denser fluid sinks down to replace it. Think of lava lamps - that's convection in action! This process keeps going round and round, spreading heat throughout the space.
Radiation is the rebel of heat transfer because it doesn't need any material at all - it can even travel through empty space (which is how the Sun's heat reaches Earth). Heat travels as infrared radiation, a type of electromagnetic wave that you can't see but can definitely feel when you stand near a fire or under a heat lamp.
Exam Gold: Unlike conduction and convection, radiation can work in a vacuum - this is your key difference to remember for tests!