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  2. Volatility (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volatility_(chemistry)

    An important factor influencing a substance's volatility is the strength of the interactions between its molecules. Attractive forces between molecules are what holds materials together, and materials with stronger intermolecular forces , such as most solids, are typically not very volatile.

  3. Volatile (astrogeology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volatile_(astrogeology)

    The value changes, for example for water in rhyolite n = 0.4111 P and for the carbon dioxide n = 0.0023 P. These simple equations work if there is only one volatile in a magma. However, in reality, the situation is not so simple because there are often multiple volatiles in a magma. It is a complex chemical interaction between different ...

  4. Magmatic water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magmatic_water

    Examples of volatiles within magma include water, carbon dioxide, and halogen gases. [1] High pressures allow these volatiles to stay relatively stable within solution. [ 1 ] However, over time, as the magmatic pressure decreases, volatiles will rise out of solution in the gaseous phase, further decreasing the magmatic pressure. [ 1 ]

  5. Volatility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volatility

    Volatile acid/Volatile acidity, a term used inconsisitenly across the fields of winemaking, wastewater treatment, physiology, and other fields; Volatile (astrogeology), a group of compounds with low boiling points that are associated with a planet's or moon's crust and atmosphere

  6. Goldschmidt classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldschmidt_classification

    The Goldschmidt classification, [1] [2] developed by Victor Goldschmidt (1888–1947), is a geochemical classification which groups the chemical elements within the Earth according to their preferred host phases into lithophile (rock-loving), siderophile (iron-loving), chalcophile (sulfide ore-loving or chalcogen-loving), and atmophile (gas-loving) or volatile (the element, or a compound in ...

  7. Chemistry: A Volatile History - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemistry:_A_Volatile_History

    The periodic table does not however tell us why some elements are highly reactive, others completely inert, why some are volatile, whilst others less so. It wasn't until the beginning of the 20th century that an entirely different branch of science began to unravel the answers to these questions.

  8. Volatolomics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volatolomics

    According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the suffix ‘omics’ refers to ‘the totality of some sort’. In biology, ‘omics’ techniques are used for the high-throughput analysis of DNA sequences and epigenetic modifications (genomics), mRNA and miRNA transcripts (transcriptomics), expressed proteins (proteomics), as well as synthesised metabolites (metabolomics) in a biological system ...

  9. Cold trap (astronomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_trap_(Astronomy)

    For biological life-forms on Earth, the most important gas to be kept in that way is water vapor. Without the presence of a cold-trap in the atmosphere, the water content would gradually escape into space, making life impossible. The cold trap retains one-tenth of a percent of the water in the atmosphere in the form of a vapor at high altitudes.