"Thermo" in "thermohaline" refers to heat or temperature. "Thermohaline" describes ocean currents driven by differences in temperature and salinity.
Thermoplastics can be shaped easily by being cooled and heated time and time again. They suffer little degration by the heating and cooling. They are solid at room temp. Thermoset on the other hand cannot be repeatedly heated and cooled. if you try to re heat they become chared and do not re soften.
If you mean "atomic" as in the Atomic Bomb, then the word "nuclear" could be substituted = Nuclear Bomb.
Soap is translated 'savon' (masc.) in French.
"azotame" does not appear to be a recognized word in the English language. It may be a typo or a misspelling of another word.
evapartation is not a word, if you mean evaporation it means a process of a liquid becoming vapor. I.e. Boiling water causes the evaporation of the water to create steam!
To do with heat
The root word "thermo" relates to heat or temperature.
The thermohaline circulation is a term for the global density-driven circulation of the oceans. Derivation is from thermo- for heat and -haline for salt, which together determine the density of sea water
The term thermohaline circulation ( THC ) refers to the part of the large-scale ocean circulation that is driven by global density gradients created by surface heat and freshwater fluxes
The word "thermo" originates from the Greek word "therme," which means heat. It is commonly used as a prefix in scientific terminology related to heat, temperature, and energy transfer.
a plastic that has aids :)
REPLACE THERMO STAT/CHECK TO REPLACE THERMO CENSOR!
Thermostat
The prefix 'thermo' in thermometer comes from the Greek word "thermos," meaning hot or heat. This indicates that a thermometer is a device used to measure temperature, which is a reflection of heat energy.
Deep ocean currents are called thermohaline currents because they are driven by differences in temperature (thermo) and salinity (haline) of seawater. These factors influence water density, causing denser water to sink and less dense water to rise, creating a global circulation pattern. This process plays a crucial role in regulating the Earth's climate and distributing heat and nutrients throughout the oceans.
Another name for thermohaline current is "conveyor belt," which some call this current of the ocean.
thermo 1 is the hardest.