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Hydrogen-Oxygen chain of combustion ho.jpg (13.59 kB . 342x239 - viewed 5413 times)
Quote from: Thebox on 05/04/2019 03:01:55Hydrogen-Oxygen chain of combustion ho.jpg (13.59 kB . 342x239 - viewed 5413 times)So, it's not just physics you don't understand; you are also clueless about chemistry.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 22:21:28Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 19:53:06What are the units of the quantities involved?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 19:53:06What are the units of the quantities involved?
What are the units of the quantities involved?
It's not the drawing, as such, that's the problem.The issue is the nonsense For example, there seem to be 5 hydrogens and one oxygen in the first picture.As I said, you must be pretty poor at chemistry to think that's' the right ratio to make water.And in both pictures you have scribbled random characters on them with no indication of what they are meant to mean.It would be less of a problem, but we actually know what the details of this reaction are, so we know exactly how wrong you are.
You keep failingIn particular, you have repeatedly failed to address thisQuote from: Bored chemist on 05/04/2019 17:31:37Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 22:21:28Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 19:53:06What are the units of the quantities involved?
No there is lots of hydrogen and oxygen in the picture but you can't see it , the one's you can see are conceptual Mr C so you can see it .
Quote from: Bored chemist on 06/04/2019 13:50:13You keep failingIn particular, you have repeatedly failed to address thisQuote from: Bored chemist on 05/04/2019 17:31:37Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 22:21:28Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/04/2019 19:53:06What are the units of the quantities involved?Ask a mathematician , I'm a theoretical physicist , not a mathematician , science can put in the values , I'm not going to do all the work for them , lazy I tell ya .
Quote from: Thebox on 06/04/2019 13:51:39No there is lots of hydrogen and oxygen in the picture but you can't see it , the one's you can see are conceptual Mr C so you can see it . So, you have provided a picture of hydrogen and oxygen- in which the hydrogen and oxygen are invisible.Did you think that might be helpful somehow?
Since you have made up some stuff that's wrong; then drawn it badly and written random symbols on it, it's not me that needs to learn physics.
The process I've explained involves gravity Mr C , the ignition point has greater mass/energy therefore attracts the lesser energy state surrounding volume of hydrogen and air .
You haven't a clue how the universe works , seriously .
explaining almost everything in the process .
because I can bloody well see it .
Flames work in zero gravity.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 06/04/2019 16:35:22Flames work in zero gravity.It's not zero gravity , you're are not accounting for the flames mass.
Quote from: Thebox on 06/04/2019 16:45:50Quote from: Bored chemist on 06/04/2019 16:35:22Flames work in zero gravity.It's not zero gravity , you're are not accounting for the flames mass. Are there any more straws you want to clutch at?The gravitational forces involved in a hydrogen flame are tiny.
Relative to itself they are massive
Quote from: Thebox on 06/04/2019 18:13:03Relative to itself they are massiveThat doesn't actually mean anything.The forces are still tiny.
Scratches head