There is no one "law of conservation", there are several laws, such as conservation of energy, conservation of mass, conservation of electric charge, conservation of rotational momentum, etc.What is always true is that there is SOME quantity that doesn't change in the case of a closed system.
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∙ 6y agolaw
i think that it is a law The first law of thermodynamics. Meaning, "...that energy can not be created or destroyed, it can only be changed from one form to another or transferred from one body to another, but the total amount of energy remains constant (the same)."
The law of conservation of matter states that matter is neither created nor destroyed. An example of this is a simple combustion reaction of methane. CH4 + 2O2 --> CO2 + 2H2O. There is 1 carbon, four oxygen's and four hydrogens on each side, thus showing conservation of matter.
If something obeys a Law of Conservation, the total amount of it is the same at the end of a process as at the start.
[the law of conservation of energy]Wrong: The law of conservation of energy says that energycannot be created or destroyed. Do not change an answer unless you know the answer.The correct answer is the Law of Conservation of Charge, which states that the net charge of an isolated system remains constant.
true
According to the Law of Conservation of Mass the energy has always been here.
According to the Law of Conservation of Mass the energy has always been here.
Is it true that the law of conservation of engery states that momentum is in a collision
According to the law of conservation of energy, the total energy in a closed system remains constant. Energy can change from one form to another (such as potential to kinetic) but it cannot be created or destroyed.
It is always true, but may be a little confusing if you run an experiment where, for example, a gas is formed as one of the products, and that gas escapes into the atmosphere. Thus, you wouldn't collect it, and so the mass of the products would APPEAR to be less than the mass of the reactants. But alas, conservation of matter always holds true.
Every time someone tries to disprove it, they always fail. It's just a known fact
Yes, total energy is always conserved in a closed system, according to the law of conservation of energy. Energy can change forms within a system (e.g., potential energy to kinetic energy), but the total amount of energy remains constant.
arooroo science is all about how to make a tree and burning it by a elephents's but using kintic enerygy if u ask me it will always be a smiley face. I HOPE THAT ANSWERES UR QUESTION AROOROO WFHS #11
True Apex
True. According to the law of conservation of mass-energy, matter and energy can neither be created nor destroyed, only transferred or transformed from one form to another. So, in any isolated system, the total amount of matter and energy remains constant.
The law that states the total mass of the reactants always equals the total mass of the products is the Law of Conservation of Mass, also known as the Law of Mass Conservation. This principle, established by Antoine Lavoisier in the late 18th century, is a fundamental concept in chemistry that asserts that mass is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction, only rearranged.