Dissolution of this compound in water is a strongly endothermic reaction.
The test showed that the more plentiful lithium-7 also does so, albeit by an endothermic reaction.
T-peak is the position where the endothermic reaction occurs at the maximum.
This is the physical understanding of exothermic and endothermic reactions within solution.
Instant cold packs use an endothermic reaction to cool down quickly.
But I do not know of any endothermic reaction likely to account for such a sensation.
When I increase the temperature of a system in equilibrium, the endothermic reaction is favored.
Is this because the reactants for the endothermic reaction collide with more energy?
For an endothermic reaction, the datum line would be at the bottom.
The same is also true for an endothermic reaction, as in your example.