1/8=(1/2)^3 and the half life of radon is 3.8days
Half life is the time it takes for half of any amount of a radioactive substance to decay into something else.
Therefore for a sample of radon to decay to 1/8 of its original amount, it would take 3 x 3.8days=11.4 days
Answer:
substrate-level phosphorylation
Explanation:
Substrate-level phosphorylation is the metabolic reaction which results in formation of energy currency molecules, ATP or GTP by direct transfer of a phosphoryl group to the ADP or GDP from the another phosphorylated compound.
<u>In citric acid cycle, Succinyl-CoA in the presence of succinyl-CoA synthase is converted to succinate. Condensation reaction (Substrate-level phosphorylation) of GDP and Pi takes place which results in the formation of GTP.</u>
V ( HCl ) = 16.4 mL / 1000 => 0.0164 L
M( HCl) = ?
V( KOH) = 12.7 mL / 1000 => 0.0127 L
M(KOH) = 0.620 M
Number of moles KOH:
n = M x V
n = 0.620 x 0.0127
n = 0.007874 moles of KOH
number of moles HCl :
<span>HCl + KOH = H2O + KCl
</span>
1 mole HCl ------ 1 mole KOH
<span>? mole HCl--------0.007874 moles KOH
</span>
moles HCl = 0.007874 * 1 / 1
= 0.007874 moles of HCl
M = n / V
M = 0.007874 / <span>0.0164
</span>= 0.480 M
Answer (2)
hope this helps!
Answer : The ratio of to is,
Solution : Given,
= 0.21 atm
The given equilibrium reaction is,
The expression of will be,
Now put all the given values in this expression, we get:
Therefore, the ratio of to is,
<h3>Answer:</h3>
18.75 grams
<h3>Explanation:</h3>
- Half-life refers to the time taken by a radioactive material to decay by half of the original mass.
- In this case, the half-life of element X is 10 years, which means it takes 10 years for a given mass of the element to decay by half of its original mass.
- To calculate the amount that remained after decay we use;
Remaining mass = Original mass × (1/2)^n, where n is the number of half-lives
Number of half-lives = Time for the decay ÷ Half-life
= 40 years ÷ 10 years
= 4
Therefore;
Remaining mass = 300 g × (1/2)⁴
= 300 g × 1/16
= 18.75 g
Hence, a mass of 300 g of an element X decays to 18.75 g after 40 years.