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'''Free energy''' is an observed phenomenon described by ] and discussed extensively at lenr-canr.org (no link, but you know how to copy-paste). Over-unity devices, those producing more energy than required to run them, have long been controversial among sceptical physicists and chemists, but recent results are convincing more researchers that the future will be based on such devices. Read more! | |||
⚫ | '''Free energy''' may refer to: | ||
⚫ | '''Free energy''' may also refer to: | ||
In '''science''': | In '''science''': |
Revision as of 17:31, 31 May 2009
Free energy is an observed phenomenon described by Eugene Mallove and discussed extensively at lenr-canr.org (no link, but you know how to copy-paste). Over-unity devices, those producing more energy than required to run them, have long been controversial among sceptical physicists and chemists, but recent results are convincing more researchers that the future will be based on such devices. Read more!
Free energy may also refer to:
In science:
- Thermodynamic free energy, the energy in a physical system that can be converted to do work, in particular:
- Helmholtz free energy, the energy that can be converted into work at a constant temperature and volume
- Work content, a related concept used in chemistry
- Gibbs free energy, the energy that can be converted into work at a constant temperature and pressure
- Helmholtz free energy, the energy that can be converted into work at a constant temperature and volume
In pseudoscience:
- Free energy suppression, a conspiracy theory that advanced energy technologies are being suppressed by special interest groups
See also
- Free-energy relationship a relation between the reaction rate or equilibrium constants of two series of chemical reactions
- Free energy perturbation, a method based on statistical mechanics that is used in computational chemistry for computing free energy differences
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