The answer is common table salt. Looking at the chemical make up, putting an acid (I think chlorine) and and base (probably sodium) makes water (H20) and salt. So you answer would be salt
Answer:
Explanation:
<em>2. A 10 kg bowling ball would require what force to accelerate down an alleyway at a rate of 3m/s² ?</em>
Notice that I completed the question with the garbled and missing values:
<u>Data:</u>
<u />
<u>Physical principles:</u>
- Newton's second law:
<u>Solution:</u>
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<em>3. Salty has a car that accelerates at 5 m/s². If the car has a mass of 1000 kg, how much force does the car produce?</em>
Notice that I arranged the typos.
<u />
<u>Data:</u>
<u>Physical principles:</u>
- Newton's second law:
<u>Solution:</u>
<em>4. What is the mass of a falling rock if it produces a force of 147 N?</em>
<u>Data:</u>
<u>Physical principles:</u>
- neglecting air resistance ⇒ a = g: gravitational acceleration: 9.8m/s²
- Newton's second law:
<u>Solution:</u>
- Clear m from Newton's second law
- Substitute with F = 147 N and a = g = 9.8m/s², and compute
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<em>5. What is the mass of a truck if it produces a force of 14,000 N while accelerating at a rate of 5 m/s²?</em>
<u>Data:</u>
<u>Physical principles:</u>
- Second Newton's law:
<u>Solution:</u>
- Clear m from Newton's second law
- Substitute with F = 14,000 N and a = 5m/s², and compute
Solids are the only ones that keep their shape and volume no matter the container.
Answer:
Gram atomic mass is another term for the mass, in grams, of one mole of atoms of that element. "Gram atom" is a former term for a mole. ... This is a dimensionless quantity (i.e., a pure number, without units) equal to the molar mass divided by the molar mass constant
Explanation: