Answer:
A) involves changes in temperature
Explanation:
The figure is missing, but I assume that the region marked X represents the region in common between Gay-Lussac's law and Charle's Law.
Gay-Lussac's law states that:
"For an ideal gas kept at constant volume, the pressure of the gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature"
Mathematically, it can be written as
where p is the pressure of the gas and T its absolute temperature.
Charle's Law states that:
"For an ideal gas kept at constant pressure, the volume of the gas is directly proportional to its absolute temperature"
Mathematically, it can be written as
where V is the volume of the gas and T its absolute temperature.
By looking at the two descriptions of the law, we see immediately that the property that they have in common is
A) involves changes in temperature
Since the temperature is NOT kept constant in the two laws.
Bottle 1 is a compound bottle 2 is element bottle 3 is a element bottle 4 is a element
More than likely, your seeing a chemical reaction. The bubbles that are forming are caused by two compounds interacting with each other.
Answer:
2
Explanation:
H2O2 ➞ 2 H2O + O2
The reaction is currently not balanced because the number of atoms on the reactant side is not equal to that of the product side
Hydrogen
Reactant = 2 Product = 4
Oxygen
Reactant = 2 Product = 4
Adding 2 to H2O2 balances the reaction as the number of atoms of both elements are now balanced on both sides of the equation
2H2O2 ➞ 2 H2O + O2
<span>The ocean is primarily a liquid and the atmosphere is mostly gas, so they are different states of matter. They also have different chemical compositions which really ought to be common knowledge. Also, very few fish swim in the sky.
YEP
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