An endothermic reaction occur with heat absorption.
Heat is written as a product of the reaction (apecs answer)
2H2O2 + heat --> 2H2O + O2
This is not a chemical formula or equation.
CaCO3 --> CaO + CO2
on the left side of the equation
What equation are you referring to
The parabolic heat equation is a partial differential equation that models the diffusion of heat (i.e. temperature) through a medium through time. More information, including a spreadsheet to solve the heat equation in Excel, is given at the related link.
The parabolic heat equation is a partial differential equation that models the diffusion of heat (i.e. temperature) through a medium through time. More information, including a spreadsheet to solve the heat equation in Excel, is given at the related link.
I believe this question refers to the fact that the partial differential equation that describes heat transfer is classified as a parabolic equation. So you would see these two terms together when people talk about the "parabolic heat equation" (meaning the heat equation, which is a parabolic equation): <math>u_t = k(u_{xx} + u_{yy} + u_{zz})</math>
An endothermic reaction occur with heat absorption.
The heat in an endothermic reaction is included as a reactant on the left side of the equation, and has a positive value.
The heat in an endothermic reaction is included as a reactant on the left side of the equation, and has a positive value.
They specify heat flow for the reaction.
That depends what the original equation is.
Yes, it is.
Heat is written as a product of the reaction (apecs answer)