The Total energy of moving particles is the sum of the Scalar/potential energy and the vector energy, in summary the Quaternion Energy is the Total Energy.
E = Es + Ev = Es + mcV
The Scalar or Potential energy is Gravity and or Electric Potential energy if the particle is charged.
The total energy of how quickly the particles that make up an object are moving is called kinetic energy. It is directly related to the speed of the particles and their mass, and it is a component of the object's total mechanical energy.
The total energy of the particles in a substance is measured by its internal energy. This includes the kinetic energy of the particles (related to temperature) and any potential energy stored in the substance's chemical bonds or structures.
The total energy of particles in a substance is measured by the quantity known as internal energy. It includes the kinetic and potential energies of the particles within a system.
Temperature measures the average kinetic energy of the particles in a body, while thermal energy is the total kinetic energy of all the particles in a body. Two bodies at the same temperature can have different amounts of thermal energy depending on their size and mass. Temperature gives an indication of how fast the particles are moving, but not the total energy present.
The total penitential energy of the particles in an object is the sum of the gravitational potential energy of each particle. The kinetic energy of the particles in an object is the sum of the kinetic energy of each particle. The total energy of the particles is the sum of the penitential and kinetic energy.
There is no such thing as "energy of motivation" for particles.
one
one
thermal energy temperature
The total energy of how quickly the particles that make up an object are moving is called kinetic energy. It is directly related to the speed of the particles and their mass, and it is a component of the object's total mechanical energy.
The total energy of the particles in a substance is measured by its internal energy. This includes the kinetic energy of the particles (related to temperature) and any potential energy stored in the substance's chemical bonds or structures.
The total energy of particles in a substance is measured by the quantity known as internal energy. It includes the kinetic and potential energies of the particles within a system.
internal energy measures the total energy of the particles in a substance
Temperature measures the average kinetic energy of the particles in a body, while thermal energy is the total kinetic energy of all the particles in a body. Two bodies at the same temperature can have different amounts of thermal energy depending on their size and mass. Temperature gives an indication of how fast the particles are moving, but not the total energy present.
The total penitential energy of the particles in an object is the sum of the gravitational potential energy of each particle. The kinetic energy of the particles in an object is the sum of the kinetic energy of each particle. The total energy of the particles is the sum of the penitential and kinetic energy.
Internal energy.
In microscopic particles it's called internal energy. In macroscopic particles it's called thermodynamic energy.