| NERNST | Walther Hermann ___, German physical chemist who formulated the third law of thermodynamics; Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1920) (6) |
| EIGEN | Manfred _, German physical chemist who shared the 1967 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (5) |
| PROUST | Joseph Louis -; analytical chemist who formulated the law of definite proportions (6) |
| HESSE | Hermann ___, German-born Swiss novelist awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1946 (5) |
| ENTHALPY | Function for physical chemists: they plan to go wild |
| RUDOLFCLAUSIUS | German physicist who formulated the second law of thermodynamics (1850) and coined the term entropy (6,8) |
| ENERGY | According to the first law of thermodynamics, property of matter that can neither be created nor des |
| THRUST | Propulsive property, as of a jet or rocket engine, explained by Newton's third law of motion (6) |
| ENTROPY | Subject of the second law of thermodynamics |
| MAXWELLSDEMON | *Theoretical being who violates the second law of thermodynamics |
| EQUAL | "To every action there is always opposed an - reaction", according to Newton's third law of motion (5) |
| HESS | Russian chemist with a law of thermodynamics named after him |
| PERPETUALMOTION | Violation of the first and second laws of thermodynamics |
| JOULE | Physicist James who contributed to the laws of thermodynamics |
| NICOLASCARNOT | Who is regarded as the founder of thermodynamics, publishing his theories in Reflections on the Moti |
| RANKINE | William, 19c Scottish engineer and scientist who worked in the field of thermodynamics (7) |
| FOUR | How many laws of thermodynamics are there? (4) |
| MIDDLEHIGH | & 43D. Language of works by Gottfried von Strassburg and Walther von der Vogelweide |
| REACTIONS | Forces which are defined as 'equal and opposite' according to Newton's Third Law (9) |
| RORSCHACH | Hermann ___, Swiss psychiatrist who created the ink-blot test (9) |