There are exactly (a). 10.0 and (b). 28.0
First is hydrogen and second is oxygen
It is a scientific hypothesis. A scientific hypothesis must be testable, however there is a significantly more grounded necessity that a testable speculation must meet before it can truly be viewed as logical. This foundation comes essentially from crafted by the rationalist of science Karl Popper, and is called "falsifiability".
Answer:
0.5059kg
Explanation:
The heat absorbed for the water is determined using the equation:7
Q = C×m×ΔT
<em>Where Q is heat absorbed (4300cal)</em>
<em>C is specific heat (1cal/g°C)</em>
<em>m is the mass in grams</em>
<em>ΔT is change in °C (101.0°C - 92.5°C = 8.5°C)</em>
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Replacing:
4300cal = 1cal/g°C×m×8.5°C
505.9g = m
In kg, the mass of water is:
<h3>0.5059kg</h3>
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Answer:
None of these are correct, because there is no way to balance this equation, but I hope these steps help you figure out your answer.
Explanation:
Count out the single amounts of elements you have on both sides of the equation. To be balanced, you need to have the exact same for each element.
Before balanced Left side.
Cl-2
O-8
H-2
Before balanced right side.
H-1
Cl-1
O-3
That means we need to increase Hydrogen, Chlorine and Oxygen on the right for sure and see how that affects the equation. You can keep adding the Coefficients until the # of elements begin to match on each side.
(I tried to balance this equation, it doesn't work, there is too much on the reactants side for what the product is.)