Well for a start, this makes absolutely no sense, "discovered a fuel that burns so hot that it becomes cold."
<span>And yes, it's not science if the experiment can't be repeated. In fact they should WANT it to be repeated so that you can get credit for discovering something new and then possibly harness this effect to produce useful applications. </span>
<span>For all we know they had a fewer of LN2 in the lab that got shredded by the blast, LN2 could certainly have frozen many things (not metal though, since metal is already solid at room temperature, (except for mercury)), and afterwards would leave no trace.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
Let's try and figure out the ones you don't keep.
Receipts from the dollar tree. You can't return what you bought and you only paid a dollar. It's not worth it.
Food receipts. You can't return it and unless you want to itemize what you spend / month and on what, they don't serve any purpose.
Now figure out which ones you would want to keep
1. Anything pertaining to medical perscriptions. I don't know how it works in the United States, but in Canada we are allowed to deduct only medications with a DIN number.
2 Anything that you would use for travelling that is not for pleasure (ie it is a business expense). So if you are a salesman and your territory is from A to B you would deduct meals, mileages, motels if you must stay away from home
3 In the states some tax receipts are deductible, so you might want to save those.
the particles of solids move but very slowly.
the particles of liquids move moderately fast
the particles of gas move very fast.
The reasons for this movement is the space the particles are together. Since there is not move space between solids, the particles move slowly, water there is moderate space, and air there is a lot of space.