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Technically, it isn't "heat" that makes a chemical reaction happen. "Heat" is merely the flow of energy from one place to another. It is the energy itself that causes a reaction to occur. As an increase in temperature occurs, there is an increase in the energy in a group of molecules by making them mover around faster and bum into each other more. This energy is called "Activation energy", and is defined as the amount of energy required to make the reaction start and carry on spontaneously. Higher activation energy implies that the reactants need more energy to start than a reaction with a lower activation energy. With that being said, activation energy is the answer
Viscosity denotes opposition to flow.
no it cant
I dont know but i like cake do u
A lava flow flows as a viscous liquid, rather like molasses only thicker. A pyroclastic flow is a mixture of ash, gas, and rock fragments and is not significantly affected by viscous forces that would slow it down. It moves like an avalanche or thunderstorm downburst rather than a liquid.
Technically, it isn't "heat" that makes a chemical reaction happen. "Heat" is merely the flow of energy from one place to another. It is the energy itself that causes a reaction to occur. As an increase in temperature occurs, there is an increase in the energy in a group of molecules by making them mover around faster and bum into each other more. This energy is called "Activation energy", and is defined as the amount of energy required to make the reaction start and carry on spontaneously. Higher activation energy implies that the reactants need more energy to start than a reaction with a lower activation energy. With that being said, activation energy is the answer
it mean that it can not be compressed
Viscosity denotes opposition to flow.
If a fluid in laminar flow flows around an obstacle, it exerts a viscous drag on the obstacle. Frictional forces accelerate the fluid backward (against the direction of flow) and the obstacle forward (in the direction of flow). The viscous drag force increases linearly with the speed of the fluid.
no it cant
Viscous flux usually refers to laminar flow. In most contexts, it refers to something like creeping flow or Poiseuille flow. Viscous flus usually arises from an external body force acting on a fluid. The external body force is usually pressure, or in some instances, centripetal force or magnetism.
R. C. Buggeln has written: 'Computation of multi-dimensional viscous supersonic flow' -- subject(s): Viscous flow, Navier-Stokes equations
Its the Speed of which the flow travels, Water will travel faster than blood or yogurt
Viscosity is the measure of a fluids resistance to flow. The higher the viscosity the more viscous (the more resistance it has to flow); honey is generally much more viscous than water.
Trudi A. Shortis has written: 'On the nonlinear stability of the unsteady, viscous flow of an incompressible fluid in a curved pipe' -- subject(s): Viscous flow, Nonlinear systems, Unsteady flow, Stability tests, Pipes (Tubes), Incompressible fluids, Flow stability
Pau-chang Lu has written: 'Introduction to the mechanics of viscous fluids' -- subject(s): Viscous flow
I dont know but i like cake do u