Answer:
I don't know if you can directly prove it with evidence if you haven't observed it but you can maybe take an educated guess by the aftermath of it?
For example, you see a burnt log. At this time, people don't know what fire is. After we study the log, we could see that it takes extreme temperature in order to burn the log and that would help people see that there is a force like fire that can cause this. In a way, finding out that extreme temperatures burns stuff is another step closer to the discovery and proof of fire
I hope that makes sense
Answer:
The correct answer is - yes, 4.57 g of solute per 100 ml of solution
Explanation:
The correct answer is yes we can calculate the solubility of X in the water at 22.0°C. The salt will remain after the evaporate from the dissolved and cooled down at 26°C.
Then, the amount of solute dissolved in the 700 ml solution at 26°C is the weighed precipitate: 0.032 kg = 32 g.
Then solublity will be :
32. g solute / 700 ml solution = y / 100 ml solution
⇒ y = 32. g solute × 100 ml solution / 700 ml solution = 4.57 g.
Thus, the answer is 4.57 g of solute per 100 ml of solution.
Answer:
2.567 litres
Explanation:
I dont have a proper explanation sorry
Non metals and metollids in periodic tables are the same how this helps ;)