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conservation of energy A fundamental law of modern physics which states that the sum of the various forms of energy must always remain constant in any physical process.
Ãâó: www.tifr.res.in/~sachi/glossaryC.html
conservation This term is used in many ways. Practitioners in the DSM field tend to reserve the term conservation for the reduction of energy use, rather than the reduction in the draw on the system at a specific point in time (demand in electricity parlance, rather than economics parlance). Sometimes it is used to refer to any reduction in energy use, or peak demand.
Ãâó: www.liheap.ncat.org/iutil2.htm
conservation of energy a principle stating that the total energy (or mass or momentum) in a system remains constant regardless of changes within the system
Ãâó: hub1.worlded.org/docs/lowell/PHYSICS.htm
conservation When a quantity (eg electric charge, energy, or momentum) is conserved, it is the same after a reaction between particles as it was before.
Ãâó: pdg.web.cern.ch/pdg/cpep/glossary.html
conservation Conservation is the wise use of natural resources (nutrients, minerals, water, plants, animals, etc.). Planned action or non-action to preserve or protect living and non-living resources.
Ãâó: texas.earth911.org/master.asp
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