Polaris417 said:
Is it a particle, or not? My Chemistry teacher has been saying both and I am not sure which it is. Sometimes he says that energy is a particle, while sometimes, it is just a wave moving through particles.
Thanks very much.
Polaris417 said:
Is it a particle, or not? My Chemistry teacher has been saying both and I am not sure which it is. Sometimes he says that energy is a particle, while sometimes, it is just a wave moving through particles.
Thanks very much.
This is the absolute value of energy in particle and electromagnetic wave alike.
The first law of thermodynamics does not hinder all possible energy conversion of both wave and particle. Both have magnitude of energy and both could be converted reversible any time, by definition of the 1st itself as the law is just the accounting of the absolute value of energy (where it goes, where its from). It can not be created or destroyed. This simply means any processes cost you something as losses in a form of heat and light, so if you are going to reverse the process, you will spent a lot more than what you get.
Consider burning 2H + 1/2O
2 for instance releases heat (some goes to work, some as heat loss) and formed H
2O as an end product, now if you are going to separate H2O once again, you would find out that the energy you'll spent on the separation will be much more than what you get in combustion.
As of the moment (as there are no known knowledge or laws that energy cycles itself at the end point), nature limits reversible conversion and brings forth the 2nd law of Thermodynamics and it says energy conversion to some point is a one way street. Real world process is a one direction and there is what you call entropy production to any process above zero absolute pressure and temperature.
Say for example, you use gasoline to run your bike on the street, but say, if you push your bike or have it pulled by a car or truck - it can not simply produce the gasoline you spent no matter what (so it's irreversible).
Another example is you burn a gas and produce light and heat on the process, but given light and heat, you can not simply recover the gas.
this is a simple equation but looking and focusing on it brings a lot of insights and tangents.