Because they don't care and think the ozone layer is fine.
Answer:
1. Which people are in the control group? The people who received the mint without the secret ingredient
(Group B) would be the control group.
2. What is the independent variable? Secret ingredient in the breath mint
3. What is the dependent variable? Amount of breath odor (or bad breath)
4. What should Mr. Krabs’ conclusion be? The breath mint with the secret ingredient appears to reduce the
amount of breath odor more than half the time, but it is not 100% effective.
5. Why do you think 10 people in group B reported fresher breath? This may be due to the placebo effect.
I don’t know about 1 But number 2 is AB + xH2O = AB.xH2O
Answer:
pH = 12.65
Explanation:
From the given information:
number of moles =mass in gram / molar mass
number of moles of KOH = mass of KOH / molar mass of KOH
number of moles of KOH = 0.251 g / 56.1 g/mol = 0.004474 mol
For solution :
number of moles = Concentration × volume
concetration = number of moles/ volume
concetration = 0.004474 mol / 0.100 L
concetration = 0.04474 M
We know that 1 moles KOH result into 1 mole OH⁻ ions
Therefore, Molarity of OH⁻ = 0.04474 M
Now,
pOH = -log[OH⁻]
pOH = -log (0.04474) M
pOH = 1.35
Similarly,
pH + pOH = 14
pH = 14 - pOH
pH = 14 - 1.35
pH = 12.65
I found this....
Supraglacial Moraine
A supraglacial moraine is material on the surface of a glacier. Lateral and medial moraines can be supraglacial moraines. Supraglacial moraines are made up of rocks and earth that have fallen on the glacier from the surrounding landscape. Dust and dirt left by wind and rain become part of supraglacial moraines. Sometimes the supraglacial moraine is so heavy, it blocks the view of the ice river underneath.
If a glacier melts, supraglacial moraine is evenly distributed across a valley.
Ground Moraine
Ground moraines often show up as rolling, strangely shaped land covered in grass or other vegetation. They don’t have the sharp ridges of other moraines. A ground moraine is made of sediment that slowly builds up directly underneath a glacier by tiny streams, or as the result of a glacier meeting hills and valleys in the natural landscape. When a glacier melts, the ground moraine underneath is exposed.
Ground moraines are the most common type of moraine and can be found on every continent.
Terminal Moraine
A terminal moraine is also sometimes called an end moraine. It forms at the very end of a glacier, telling scientists today important information about the glacier and how it moved. At a terminal moraine, all the debris that was scooped up and pushed to the front of the glacier is deposited as a large clump of rocks, soil, and sediment.
Scientists study terminal moraines to see where the glacier flowed and how quickly it moved. Different rocks and minerals are located in specific places in the glacier’s path. If a mineral that is unique to one part of a landscape is present in a terminal moraine, geologists know the glacier must have flowed through that area.