Examples of stable equilibrium in the following topics:
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- If the power absorbed and generated within the gas equals the power emitted by the gas, the temperature of the gas will remain constant and equilibrium is achieved.
- The question remains whether this equilibrium is stable.
- Heuristically we can see that if the cooling rate increases faster with temperature than the heating rate, then a slight increase in temperature will result in the gas cooling faster and the temperature returning to its equilibrium value.
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- If these configurations were stable, there would be four additional stereoisomers of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine.
- However, pyramidal nitrogen is normally not configurationally stable.
- It rapidly inverts its configuration (equilibrium arrows) by passing through a planar, sp2-hybridized transition state, leading to a mixture of interconverting R and S configurations.
- If the nitrogen atom were the only chiral center in the molecule, a 50:50 (racemic) mixture of R and S configurations would exist at equilibrium.
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- An object in static equilibrium remains in the same state forever, but not all forms of equilibrium are the same.
- When the first derivative is zero, we can take the second derivative to find whether the equilibrium is stable or unstable.
- \frac{d^2 U(x)} {dx^2} \right|_{x_0} > 0$, then the system is stable; conversely, if the potential is concave-down, then the equilibrium is unstable.
- If the second derivative is zero or does not exist, then the equilibrium is neutral—neither stable nor unstable.
- This is an example of unstable equilibrium.
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- Once released, the restoring force causes the ruler to move back toward its stable equilibrium position, where the net force on it is zero.
- The maximum displacement from equilibrium is known as the amplitude X .
- The object's maximum speed occurs as it passes through equilibrium.
- (d) The equilibrium point is reach again, this time with momentum to the right.
- It stops the ruler and moves it back toward equilibrium again.
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- Communities with a stable structure are said to be at equilibrium.
- Following a disturbance, the community may or may not return to the equilibrium state.
- Over time, the area will reach an equilibrium state with a set of organisms quite different from the pioneer species.
- Eventually, over 150 years, the forest will reach its equilibrium point where species composition is no longer changing and resembles the community before the fire.
- This equilibrium state is referred to as the climax community, which will remain stable until the next disturbance.
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- A decrease in demand will cause both the equilibrium price and quantity to fall.
- An increase in supply (while demand is constant) will cause the equilibrium price to decrease and the equilibrium quantity to increase.
- A decrease in supply will result in an increase is the equilibrium price and a decrease in equilibrium quantity.
- However, the decrease in demand reduces the equilibrium quantity while the increase in supply pushes the equilibrium quantity up.
- Whether equilibrium is a stable condition from which there "is no endogenous tendency to change," or and outcome which the economic process is tending toward," equilibrium represents a coordination of objectives among buyers and sellers.
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- There are two methods to find the equilibrium exchange rate between currencies; the balance of payment method and the asset market model.
- The concept of purchasing power parity is important for understanding the two models of equilibrium exchange rates below.
- The balance of payments model holds that foreign exchange rates are at an equilibrium level if they produce a stable current account balance.
- After an intermediate period, imports will be forced down and exports will rise, thus stabilizing the trade balance and bringing the currency towards equilibrium.
- The asset market model views currencies as an important element in finding the equilibrium exchange rate.
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- When the supply of a product exactly meets the demand for it, the price reaches a state of equilibrium and no longer fluctuates.
- Considering inequality, market-oriented theories claim that if left to the free-market, all products and services will reach equilibrium, and price stability will reduce inequality.
- With less supply and stable demand, the wage for agricultural labor will rise to a sustainable level.
- Generally, market-oriented theories hold that when supply of labor and goods meets demand, the economic order will reach equilibrium, and inequality will either be non-existent or will be stable.
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- Chromium exhibits a wide range of possible oxidation states, where the +3 state is the most stable energetically.
- Most important are the chromate (CrO42-) and dichromate (Cr2O72-) anions, which exist in equilibrium:
- The change in equilibrium is visible by a change from yellow (chromate) to orange (dichromate), such as when an acid is added to a neutral solution of potassium chromate.
- Many chromium(II) compounds are known, including the water-stable chromium(II) chloride (CrCl2).
- The resulting bright blue solution is only stable at neutral pH.
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- Monetary policy is the process by which a monetary authority controls the money supply, often to produce stable prices and low unemployment.
- The official goals usually include relatively stable prices and low unemployment.
- Without a policy intervention the output gap may correct itself, if falling wages and prices shift the short-run aggregate supply curve to the right until the economy returns to the long-run equilibrium.
- Suppose, for example, that high short-run aggregate demand creates an equilibrium in which prices are higher than in the long-run equilibrium.