libid
caca i believe:)
Water, like any other molecule stores energy in bonds. Water is made of 2 carbon to hydrogen bonds, which require energy to break but will release energy if they reform in a manner requiring less energy or strain.
water can store heat energy from light energy..
Energy is conserved. It becomes the the dynamic energy of the water molecule.
No. Water is essential in the process of metabolizing nutrients to produce energy, but water does not provide any energy, itself. Another way of looking at it is this: energy is obtained by breaking down molecules in reactions which release energy. Water molecules cannot release energy when they are broken down--on the contrary, breaking a water molecule consumes a significant amount of energy.
no it cannot
A hydrophobic compound that simultaneously stores energy would be a hydrocarbon. There are several types of hydrocarbons, but oil is distinct in being unmixable with water.
Carbohydrate.
You cannot store power any more than you can store velocity, because it is simply a 'rate' -the rate of doing work. In order to do work you can store potential energy in, for example, the form of water held behind a dam. When the water is allowed to pass through a turbine, that turbine does work by converting this energy into electrical energy.
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No. ATP is a significantly less stable energy storage molecule compared to fats, it slowly hydrolyzes when in water.
ionizes