Is heat removed a form of change in enthalpy?

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In summary, heat removal is a form of change in enthalpy. Enthalpy is a thermodynamic property that measures the total energy of a system, including both its internal energy and the work required to create a system. When heat is removed from a system, its enthalpy decreases, resulting in a decrease in the system's overall energy. This can lead to changes in the system's physical or chemical properties, such as a decrease in temperature or a phase change. Heat removal is an important factor in many processes, including refrigeration and cooling systems, and plays a crucial role in the study of thermodynamics.
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turtleGuy
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Can "heat removed" be considered as change in enthalpy?
 
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Welcome to the PF. :smile:

The New Member Introduction forum is just for brief introductions, not questions. Please post your question in the General Physics forum (with the thread ;prefix set to "B" basic or "I" intermediate). Please also see if you can answer your question first with a PF forum search, and by reading on Wikipedia, etc. If you cannot answer it yourself, post links to your reading when you start the new thread.

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