Yes they are stable because they follow octet rule but am not sure if they are exist separetly
Answer:
<h2>ignore your body being cold</h2>
Hope it helps
Answer:
1) The bubbles will grow, and more may appear.
2)Can A will make a louder and stronger fizz than can B.
Explanation:
When you squeeze the sides of the bottle you increase the pressure pushing on the bubble, making it compress into a smaller space. This decrease in volume causes the bubble to increase in density. When the bubble increases in density, the bubble will grow and more bubbles will appear. Therefore, Changing the pressure (by squeezing the bottle) changes the volume of the bubbles. The number of bubbles doesn't change, just their size increases.
Carbonated drinks tend to lose their fizz at higher temperatures because the loss of carbon dioxide in liquids is increased as temperature is raised. This can be explained by the fact that when carbonated liquids are exposed to high temperatures, the solubility of gases in them is decreased. Hence the solubility of CO2 gas in can A at 32°C is less than the solubility of CO2 in can B at 8°C. Thus can A will tend to make a louder fizz more than can B.
A. bacteria because its prokaryotic the others are eukaryotic
Answer:
19.6 J
Step-by-step explanation:
Before the ball is dropped, it has a <em>potential energy
</em>
PE = mgh
PE = 0.2 × 10 × 9.8
PE = 19.6 J
Just before the ball hits the ground, the potential energy has been converted into kinetic (<em>mechanical</em>) energy.
KE = 19.6 J