BEC is formed when a gas having density of 1/100,000 of normal air is cooled to ultra low temperatures. It looses the regular intermolecular movement and changes to wave like movement.
MEASUREMENT
Naphtha is a petroleum condensate, therefore it is a condensate, therefore they are both condensate.
Rubidium in itself is not an example of a Bose-Einstein condensate. The Bose-Einstein condensate is the fifth state of matter. Bose-Einstein condensate is a state of matter that only exists near absolute zero (zero degrees Kelvin) temperatures. Currently Rubidium is one of the only materials that scientists have caused to become a Bose-Einstein condensate. So Rubidium isn't an example of a Bose-Einstein condensate, its just an element that has been able to change state and become a Bose-Einstein condensate. Another one is Neutron star wich is the dead remains of a star that has exploded as a supernova. It is like a giant, dense, heavy nucleus of mostly neurons.
A condensate is a liquid that is formed from the process of condensation. An example of a condensate is the water that forms on the outside of a glass filled with water and ice on a very hot day.
Because all you need to do is heat the condensate up and it will evaporate again.
An example of a Bose-Einstein condensate is a superfluid state of matter formed by cooling a dilute gas of boson particles to temperatures close to absolute zero. These condensates exhibit unique quantum phenomena such as superfluidity, where the particles flow without viscosity.
The gas condensate is acidic. The acidity in the gas corrodes, therefore, forming sulphurised condensate droplets. Heating desulphurised the gas condensate.
No! A Bose Einstein Condensate only occurs at, or within billionths of a degree of, absolute zero. Batteries are generally a room temperature which is far too hot for a BEC to occur.
Condensate is a noun.
Yes. Dew is a condensate.
What type of condensate are you asking about? air conditioning
The answer will depend on what the condensate is of.