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  2. Salt water dimmer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_water_dimmer

    A dimmer consisted of a glass jar filled with salt water with a metal electrode at each end. As the upper electrode was moved away from the lower [3] electrode, the resistance increased and the lights got dimmer. [4] [5] [6] The brightness also depended on the concentration of salt in the water. [4]

  3. Zeeman effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeeman_effect

    When salt is added to the Bunsen burner, it dissociates to give sodium and chloride. The sodium atoms get excited due to photons from the sodium vapour lamp, with electrons excited from 3s to 3p states, absorbing light in the process. The sodium vapour lamp emits light at 589nm, which has precisely the energy to excite an electron of a sodium atom.

  4. Artificial seawater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_Seawater

    The tables below present an example of an artificial seawater (35.00‰ of salinity) preparation devised by Kester, Duedall, Connors and Pytkowicz (1967). [1] The recipe consists of two lists of mineral salts, the first of anhydrous salts that can be weighed out, the second of hydrous salts that should be added to the artificial seawater as a solution.

  5. Halocline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halocline

    In oceanography, a halocline (from Greek hals, halos 'salt' and klinein 'to slope') is a cline, a subtype of chemocline caused by a strong, vertical salinity gradient within a body of water. [1] Because salinity (in concert with temperature ) affects the density of seawater , it can play a role in its vertical stratification .

  6. Liquid rheostat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_rheostat

    A liquid rheostat or water rheostat [1] or salt water rheostat is a type of variable resistor. This may be used as a dummy load or as a starting resistor for large slip ring motors. In the simplest form it consists of a tank containing brine or other electrolyte solution, in which electrodes are submerged to create an electrical load .

  7. Reversed electrodialysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversed_electrodialysis

    In the Netherlands, for example, more than 3,300 m 3 fresh water runs into the sea per second on average. The membrane halves the pressure differences which results in a water column of approximately 135 meters. The energy potential is therefore e=mgΔh=3.3*10 6 kg/s*10 m/s 2 *135 meters ca.= 4.5*10 9 Joule per second, Power=4.5 gigawatts.

  8. Osmotic power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmotic_power

    A 2012 study on efficiency from Yale University concluded that the highest extractable work in constant-pressure PRO with a seawater draw solution and river water feed solution is 0.75 kWh/m 3 (2.7 kJ/L) while the free energy of mixing is 0.81 kWh/m 3 (2.9 kJ/L) — a thermodynamic extraction efficiency of 91.0%.

  9. Water dimer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_dimer

    The water dimer consists of two water molecules loosely bound by a hydrogen bond. It is the smallest water cluster . Because it is the simplest model system for studying hydrogen bonding in water, it has been the target of many theoretical [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] (and later experimental) studies that it has been called a "theoretical Guinea pig".