When changing from a solid to a liquid, melting, the heat absorbed is called the heat of fusion. When the reverse takes place, freezing, it is called the heat of solidification. For a single substance they are the same.
There is no relationship between heat of fusion and heat of vapourisation
Nuclear fusion releases energy as heat.
Heat of fusion is a physical property.
Heat generated in a nuclear fusion depends on the resistance of the plasma and the current.
Under ordinary conditions they are the same 'point'. For example, water just freezes and it just melts at zero degrees centigrade. The difference between the two states is not temperature, but the heat of fusion. When the heat of fusion is removed from water at zero degrees, it will freeze. When the heat of fusion is added to ice at zero degrees, it will melt.
They are the same thing. Fusion and solidification both mean the changing of a liquid to a solid.
The scientific name for ice forming is "freezing" or "solidification." The scientific name for ice melting is "melting" or "fusion."
There is no relationship between heat of fusion and heat of vapourisation
They're the same. latent heat of fusion - heat absorbed by a unit mass of a solid at its melting point in order to convert the solid into a liquid at the same temperature latent heat of solidification - heat liberated by a unit mass of liquid at its freezing point when it solidifies
The heat of fusion is:Q = specific heat x mass
Nuclear fusion releases energy as heat.
Heat of fusion is a physical property.
Because of the heat of fusion the ice is now water
molar heat of fusion
heat fusion is to join things together by heat. ie plastic welding.
The latent heat of evaporation
Potential energy and height: Energy=weight x height. Heat energy=thermal capacity x temperature.