Posted: 5/11/2007 1:42:21 PM EDT
| Nuff said. |
![]() Quoted: If you wanted me to be VERY specific you should have asked. There is a decrease in the zero point energy. The molecule can lower its ground state energy, the ess ground state energy means it has less atomic interactions with the molecules around it and is not repelled by them. This happens under cold conditions. Just like in real life, cold means less energy. Quoted: So at what energy level does Helium gas become Helium vapor? Quoted: That I am not even going to pretend to know. If you want you could look up the value in literature. You would have to solve some pretty radical equations to figure that out. It has been done, just have to look it up. Quoted: I can't look it up. Why not? BECAUSE IT IS NOT THERE!! Quoted: Im sure you can find its ground state energy. Quoted: 1s2 Are you saying in a vapor it is not 1s2 or in a gas it is not 1s2? "At standard conditions" if that makes you feel better. Quoted: Are you fucking stupid????? You ASKED me how a vapor can become a solid, that is where the quantum energy states come into play with attraction to other surrounding molecules. NEVER DID I SAY THIS WAS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A GAS AND VAPOR. NEVER DID I USE THE QUANTUM ENERGY STAES TO TELL THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A GAS AND VAPOR. I ONLY USED IT TO EXPLAIN THE PHYSICAL CHANGE TO AN ATOM TO GET (A NOBEL GAS) TO TURN INTO A LIQUID. STOP PUTTING WORDS IN MY MOUTH!!!! I am done with this thread. Think whatever the hell you want. I am willing to bet that I am the only one in this thread that has their name on a published journal article, yet noone jgives a shit what I say. Use whatever definition you want. |