Using the chart that has been provided, we may determine water temperature. We do this by drawing a straight line form the bottom scale which has the ppm of oxygen dissolved to the middle scale which has the percentage saturation.
The line starts from 11.5 ppm on the bottom scale and goes to 90% on the middle scale. Next, we continue this line, without changing its slope, to the third scale showing temperature. We see that it crosses the temperature scale at 4°C.
The temperature of the water is 4 °C.
Just choose 3
1) Lakes can form in hollows left by meteorite impacts (e.g. Clearwater Lakes, Quebec, Canada).
2) Lakes can form in the craters formed by volcanoes (e.g. Crater Lake, Oragon)
3) Lakes can form when a river is damed by a natural rock fall or man (e.g. Lake Mede)
4) Lakes can form where glaciers have scooped out the rock from the floor of a valley (e.g. Lake Geneva)
5) Lakes can form where block faulting lowers the land (e.g. lake Baikal)
6) lakes can form in natural depressions in the land (e.g. Lake Victoria)
Answer:
terrestrial planets have a higher density than Jovian planets
Answer:
- Reduced biodiversity
- Health problems from drinking the water
- Diseases
0.050 litres of the water will be required to make a 3.91 M solution with 0.196 moles in it.
Explanation:
Data given:
moles of Cd = 0.196 Moles
Molarity of the solution = 3.91 M
Volume in litres =?
molarity is calculated by the formula:
molarity =
putting the values in the above formula and rearranging it for volume:
volume =
volume =
volume = 0.050 litres
0.050 litres of the water will be required to make a 3.91 M solution with 0.196 moles in it.
Molarity is the number of moles present in a given volume of solution which is given in litres. It is the measurement of the concentration of particular solute in a solution.