Answer:
Khfxgkhxxkfhkugxxiufxhfixiyf
Explanation:
Xlufy8fxtukuxfxtu
Answer:
- <u><em>Sodium chloride</em></u>
Explanation:
The attached graph with a green and a red arrow facilitates the understanding of this explanation.
To read the <em>solubility </em>on the <em>graph</em>, you can start with the temperature, on the x-axis.
The red vertical arrow shows how, departing from the <em>40ºC temperature</em> on the x-axis, you intersect the<em> solutibility curve </em>of sodium chloride at a height (y-axis) corresponding to <em>60 g/100cm³ of water</em> (follow the green horizontal arrow).
Hence, <em>sodium chloride is the salt that can dissolve at a concentration of about 60g/100cm³ of water at 40ºC.</em>
fluorine, F2, chlorine, Cl2, bromine, Br2, or iodine, I2
Answer:
precipitation and evaporation
Explanation:
salinity :salt concentration
Precipitation: this brings freshwater into the ocean which are not salty, so it is diluting its salt concentration.
evaporation: takes all the water and leaves the salt behind
Answer:
air pollution and potential reactor accidents
Explanation:
i pretty sure on those two