Thermodynamics is the study of relationship of heat with other kinds of energy such mechanical, electrical, or chemical energy.
The closest law is the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Note that not necessarily "most" energy will be converted to unusable heat, but it is almost inevitable that some will.
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The temperature (second law of thermodynamics) The amount of lactic acid in your muscle(s) Your heartrate Your respiration rate (erm .... you'll breathe faster)
Because of the second law of thermodynamics , law of entropy. "when energy flows from a high-temperature object to a low-temperature object, the source temperature is decreased while the sink temperature is increased; hence temperature differences tend to diminish over time."
You need to specify the pressure as well as the temperature. At 20°C and 1bar (atmospheric pressure), CO2 is a gas. At 20°C and 100bar, CO2 is a liquid. The full phase diagram of CO2 (ie its phase at different T and P) is readily found in chemical thermodynamics textbooks or on-line.
The first law of thermodynamics states that the energy of an isolated system is constant.
CV Stands for Control Volume Only in Thermodynamics and it is a fixed region in a open systems. The region of space enclosed by The open system boundaries is called Control Volume.
Thermodynamics
The root mean square of the velocity.
Magic
My college thermodynamics course was a beast...
applications of thermodynamics in textile
The answer is "Thermodynamics"
The word thermodynamics does not have a synonym or an antonym.
I think you mean "thermodynamics" -- which is the study of heat and how it changes. Literally, thermo means "heat" and dynamics means motion -- so thermodynamics literally means "heat motion." You can't literally see heat move so thermodynamics is really the study of how heat can change into energy and can generate power.
Stanley I. Sandler has written: 'Chemical, biochemical, and engineering thermodynamics' -- subject(s): Textbooks, Thermodynamics, Biochemical engineering, Chemical engineering 'An introduction to applied statistical thermodynamics' -- subject(s): Thermodynamics, Statistical thermodynamics, Industrial applications
Thermodynamics is part of physics.