However, if the CO2 was pressurized and turned into liquid, adding an electrolyte, would it be possible to split the CO2 into its components?
Edit: is the temperature (T): 2·105 the temperature required to split 1 molecule of CO2, in degrees kelvin? In addition, I now understand that your...
I have been researching on the bonding energies of different compounds, and for example, for CO2 it is 1600kJ/mole, 1600kJ/44g, or ~36.37kJ/g of energy required to split the carbon dioxide into carbon and oxygen. Furthermore, I transformed the amount of energy required in kJ to degrees celsius...
I am currently learning on math, physics (mostly conceptual), artificial intelligence using tensorflow in python, and sometimes I research and keep on learning on arduino, electrical engineering, space exploration and the geology of different planets or celestial bodies, with occasionally some...
I already knew that the required current would be astronomical, but is there exactly any way of calculating the current with a formula? Or, in the other hand, calculate the acceleration with an specific current and voltage input (not in the previous case, but in a different, for example, 5...
Having a cylindrical iron container with wall thickness of 20 cm, and a total weight of 500 tons when filled with its cargo, how would you be able to calculate its required voltage and current input in a vertical railgun system (relative to the Moon's surface), with an exit acceleration of...
This website (http://www.openculture.com/math_free_courses) may help, all of the courses are free. Another very good website is https://openstax.org/subjects/math.
I would like to know if there is any formula for calculating the necessary conditions for certain elements to undergo nuclear fusion. I know that before the quantum tunnel effect was proposed, theoretically nuclear fusion reactions shouldn't occur in the Sun; with the increasing energy (affected...
Thank you very much for this advice, I will take it into account, and definitely check out the course on 'Mathematical Way of Thinking' :smile:. Currently, I am also in another Coursera course of Stanford University in 'Introduction to Logic'
Hello, I am a 12 year-old boy, and I am very interested in physics and maths. For maths, would you recommend me to keep learning by myself following the order of topics for example, in each year in KhanAcademy? Or should I learn it in a different order? For physics, for the moment, I don't want...
Hello, I am 12 years old and I am interested in physics, astronomy and chemistry, specially physics, astronomy and maths (I love algebra, geometry and trigonometry specially). I am also interested in astrophysics, particle physics and high-energy physics and quantum mechanics.