Also known as Hess's law of constant heat summation
relationship in physical chemistry
Hess's law states that the total amount of heat released or absorbed in a chemical reaction depends only on the starting and ending substances, not on the path the reaction takes to get there. This principle is useful for calculating the heat energy of reactions that are difficult to measure directly by combining measurements from other related reactions.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).