No, the formation of dew is condensation, which is a physical change.
The following is the introduction to a special e-publication called Determining the Age of the Earth (click the link to see a table of contents). Published earlier this year, the collection draws articles from the archives of Scientific American. In the collection, this introduction appears with the title, “Stumbling Toward an Understanding of Geologic Timescales.”
Answer:
2Ba₃(PO₄)₂ +6SiO₂ ⇒ P₄O₁₀ +6BaSiO₃
Explanation:
Equating coefficients, you get ...
aBa₃(PO₄)₂ +bSiO₂ ⇒ cP₄O₁₀ +dBaSiO₃
For Ba: 3a = d
For P: 2a = 4c
For O: 8a +2b = 10c +3d
For Si: b = d
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Expressing everything in terms of b and c, we get ...
d = b
a = b/3 = 2c
From the second, b = 6c, so we have ...
a = 2c
b = 6c
c = c
d = 6c
And we can write the equation with c=1 as ...
2Ba₃(PO₄)₂ +6SiO₂ ⇒ P₄O₁₀ +6BaSiO₃
Answer: 16.7 gallon
Explanation:
Given: The car can drive 30.3 miles when 1 gallon of gasoline is used.
Distance covered = 506.3 miles
Thus for 30.3 miles, the amount of gasoline used= 1 gallon
For 506.3 miles, the amount of gasoline used=
Thus the amount of gasoline used is 16.7 gallons.
Density = (mass) / (volume)
Density = (17.0 g) / (25.3 cm³) = 0.672 gm per cm³. (rounded)