Physics : 15/15 Rank 1 (Hand in research)
Chem: 33/40 Rank 3 (Hand in)
Maths:41/55 Rank 14th (open book)
Maths 1: 26/40 Rank 7th (open book)
Modern History: 20/25 Rank 6 (source based)
Advanced English: next year
yeah my maths wasn't that good, first time under an excellent in...
Energy, what is it? Occuring to the equation its the smallest bit of anything that makes up everything, smaller than a quark.
So what is energy, does this mean we are all connected somehow?
Thanks for clearly it up, thanks in advance (if you know)
true, from i see physics as a study of energy/forces and chemistry as a study of matter.
Thanks to e=mc^2 we can say that matter is condensed energy i guess, which makes the two subjects basiclly the same, from my perspective anyway.
thats a great book, they have it with pictures now! A must have for christmas.
Your last point is ture, you never know.
Anyway i think this topic has moved away from chemistry and into physics, seems i picked the wrong forum :(
hahaha, so no?
From the looks of things you know a lot, i wonder, might you do "quanta to quarks" as the physics elective this year? (if you do physics), sounds interesting but as someone said (not sure who) the problem with subatomic particles is even they have to be made up of something, so...
the equation usually works with larger objects such as cars hitting one another, but thats newtonian physics and not sure if it works with particles, i'd ask a teacher if i wasn't on holidays. They'd probably laugh at me anyway :P
i know this is a bit off topic, but it combines chemistry and physics and i have no idea of the answer.
If you fire a large atom such as uranium into a neutron is it a collision?
If so does the equation m1u1 + m2u2 = m1v1 + m2v2 still work?
Lastly if by chance this produced an alpha...