Is an exothermic reaction catabolic or anabolic? What's the difference between anabolism and catabolism? What is the difference between anabolism and catabolism? How do you change a catabolic metabolism to anabolic metabolism? Is epinephrine anabolic or catabolic?
Why do reactants become hotter during exothermic reactions when they are losing energy and why do reactants become colder when they are gaining energy in endothermic reactions? What charges an atom? What is the relationship between common ions and the number of electrons...
In the case of nuclear reactions, the Q value is simply the mass of the reactants minus the mass of the products (the reverse of most of chemistry). A positive Q value implies that the reaction is exothermic and that over time the reaction will tend towards the products. The reverse is...
Fission of heavy elements is an exothermic reaction and can release substantial amounts of useful energy both as gamma rays and as kinetic energy of the fragments.http://science.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-power.htmhttp://people.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-bomb.htm Logged Chemists do it periodically ...
The change over temperature is called the “critical temperature.” Adding heat to the paper causes the paper to loose its color, an “endothermic” reaction. The reverse, going from colorless to colored, is an “exothermic” reaction and returns the heat....
This acid-based chemical reaction is exothermic and releases heat energy through the release of carbon dioxide. That’s the magic behind baking soda and vinegar reactions with water. Hope you all understood the simple science and now you are able to explain your kids on hands-on simple science...
High-energy nitrogenHartree-Fock theoryMP2 theoryComplex forms of nitrogen are of scientific interest for their potential as high-energy materials, since dissociation reactions of the type N_x 鈫 (x/2) N2 are strongly exothermic. However, many such N_x molecules are too unstable to serve in...
(includes counter-current type). A regenerative heat exchanger is one that removes heat from a hot fluid to be stored for release later. These have recently found use in solar thermal energy systems where excess heat absorbed during the day is stored as molten salts for later release and use...
Why do reactants become hotter during exothermic reactions when they are losing energy and why do reactants become colder when they are gaining energy in endothermic reactions? How can the amount of oxygen consumed be used to help us understand the activity level of the cells?