1AlBr3+ 3K ---> 3KBr + 1Al
Answer:
vertebral column
Explanation:
A lamprey's body has smooth, scale-less skin and two dorsal fins, but has no lateral line, no vertebrae, no swim bladder, and no paired fins.
Tuna is vertebrate.
The researcher may first weight the beaker with water and then start to heat the water to a constant temperature, for example 30 °C and then start adding salt and stirring. He should add salt slowly until solid salt starts to become visible and the solution starts becoming cloudy. When this happens, he should quickly weigh the beaker. The increase in mass is the mass of salt dissolved at that temperature.
The procedure is then repeated but at an increased temperature until 5-6 temperatures have been tested.
1) 2700 kg/l
2) 13.6 kg/l
3) 0.1578 kg
4) 8921.5 kg/m3
5) 1.59 kg/l
6) 1.84 kg/l
7) 0.21965 kg
8) 11331.9 kg/m3
9) 7.9167 kg/l
10) 238.095 cm3
Just divide the masses by volume to find out the density, multiply the volume with density to find out the mass and divide the mass by density to find out the volume.
To turn the result into SI unit (kg/l), divide the g by 1000 and ml by 1000.
Democritus, theorized that atoms were specific to the material which they composed. In addition, Democritus believed that the atoms differed in size and shape, were in constant motion in a void, collided with each other; and during these collisions, could rebound or stick together.
<u>Explanation:</u>
- One of the main atomic theorists was Democritus, a Greek philosopher who lived in the fifth century BC. Democritus realized that if a stone was partitioned fifty-fifty, the two parts would have indistinguishable properties from the whole.
- Therefore, he contemplated that if the stone were to be constantly cut into littler and littler pieces at that point; sooner or later, there would be a piece that would be so little as to be inseparable. He called these small pieces of matter as "atomos", the Greek word for inseparable.
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Democritus estimated that atoms were explicit to the material which they made. Also, Democritus accepted that the particles varied in size, were an inconsistent shape, crashed into one another; and during these impacts, could bounce back or stay together. Hence, changes in the matter were a consequence of separations or mixes of the atoms as they moved all through the void.