Sorry I didn't see this before...
Okay, I see two major problems with this student's experiment:
1) Nitric acid Won't Dissolve in Methane
Nitric acid is what's called a mineral acid. That means it is inorganic (it doesn't contain carbon) and dissolves in water.
Methane is an organic molecule (it contains carbon). It literally cannot dissolve nitric acid. Here's why:
For nitric acid (HNO3) to dissolve into a solvent, that solvent must be polar. It must have a charge to pull the positively charged Hydrogen off of the Oxygen. Methane has no charge, since its carbon and hydrogens have nearly perfect covalent bonds. Thus it cannot dissolve nitric acid. There will be no solution. That leads to the next problem:
2) He's Not actually Measuring a Solution
He's picking up the pH of the pure nitric acid. Since it didn't dissolve, what's left isn't a solution—it's like mixing oil and water. He has groups of methane and groups of nitric acid. Since methane is perfectly neutral (neither acid nor base), the electronic instrument is only picking up the extremely acidic nitric acid. There's no point to what he's doing.
Does that help?
The distance between two particles that are <em>in phase</em>
The velocity is a vectorial quantity, whereas speed is a scalar quantity, meaning it depends on the direction!
As such, the velocity is changing because the direction is changing.
<span>Since frequency and wavelength have inverse relationship. It can be expressed by the equation:
ν.λ = c
Where,
v = frequency of the electromagnetic wave.
λ = it's wavelength
c = the speed of light in a vacuum.
v = 2.00 Ghz x 10^9 Hz / 1 Ghz = 2.00 x 10^9 Hz
that means that in one second it covers 2.00 x 10^9 cycles.
λ = 3.10^8 m/s / 2.00 x 10^9 /s = 1.25E-10 nanometers</span>