Boyle's law for gases is:
true for all gases
only accurate at room temperature
ju...
Chemistry, 27.01.2020 10:31 jadenwilsan
Boyle's law for gases is:
true for all gases
only accurate at room temperature
just a model and therefore accurate for no real gas
accurate for most gases in most temperature ranges
a good example of a "law" that is now found to be incorrect
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 19:00, ghernadez
Imagine that a new planet is discovered with two moons of equal mass: moon a and moon b. the mass of the new planet is greater than the combined mass of its moons. moon a is farther away from the new planet than moon b. what is the planet's gravitational pull on moon a compared to the planet's gravitational pull on moon b? the planet's gravity repels moon a with a greater force than it repels moon b, which is why moon a is farther away. the gravitational pull on moon b is greater than on moon a because moon b is closer to the new planet than moon a. the gravitational pull on moon b is greater than on moon a because moon b is farther away from the new planet than moon a. the gravitational pull on moon a is the same as the gravitational pull on moon b because distance does not affect the planet's gravity.
Answers: 1
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 23:00, lufung8627
Consider the reaction: 2al(s) + fe2o3(s) → al2o3(s) + 2fe(s) the δhf for fe2o3(s) = -824.3 kj/mole. the δhf for al2o3(s) = -1675.7 kj/mole. finish the equation. δhrxn = [(1)( kj/mole) + (2)( kj/mole)] - [(1)( kj/mole) + (2) ( kj/mole)]
Answers: 1
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