The 3 basic laws of chemical combination are the law of conservation of mass, constant composition and multiple proportions.
Diamonds are carbon, a non-metal.
Uniformitarianism
living things are subjected to the same physical and chemical laws as nonliving things
Barium itself is not a food or ingredient; it is a chemical element. In general, chemical elements like barium do not have a kosher status as they are not classified as food items. For food products containing barium compounds, it would depend on how they are processed and if they adhere to kosher dietary laws.
Chemical formula is representative for the chemical compositon of a compound. Chemical equation is representative (describe) for a chemical reaction.
physics is the conbination of formulas.
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The conbination in Dragonfable would be Mytholigy, magic, fantasy, and to sum it all together, Fighting...
Diamonds are carbon, a non-metal.
James Arthur Campbell has written: 'Why do chemical reactions occur?' -- subject(s): Chemical reaction, Conditions and laws of, Conditions and laws of Chemical reaction
Laws is one... and the other one i dont know... :SLaw and making models.
Chemical reactions respect the law of mass conservation.
N.B Chapman has written: 'Advances in linear free energy relationship' -- subject(s): Chemical reaction, Conditions and laws of, Conditions and laws of Chemical reaction
The laws of conservation of mass and of numbers of each type of atom.
I'm sure it is, I know Starbucks had something like a strawberry banana smoothie. I would try it!!
I think you're thinking about Gwan and it's a conbination on Going and On. 'Waa Gwan' would then be "What's going on"
No one has yet documented a case where a chemical reaction does not obey the laws of thermodynamics - so - yes - all the chemical reactions will obey the laws of thermodynamics. On a philosophic note: since no exceptions to the theories that constitute thermodynamics have been observed, we consider them "laws". Should we ever find an exception, we will have to modify the theories to craft new rules that will then be considered "laws". That's how science works.