<span>Enzymes have three main characteristics. First, they increase the rate of a natural chemical reaction. Secondly, they typically only react with one specific substrate or reactant, and thirdly, enzyme activity is regulated and controlled within the cell through several different means, including regulation by inhibitors and activators. It is possible to group enzymes into different categories, including oxidases, transferases, hydrolases, lyaes, isomerases and ligases. In naming enzymes, the "-ase" suffix is often appended to the name of the substrate molecule upon which which the enzyme reacts. For example, the enzyme sucrase catalyzes the transformation of the sugar sucrose in to glucose and fructose. In this case, the "sucr-" suffix represents the molecule upon which the sucrase enzyme reacts. Not all enzymes are named according to this convention.</span>
- In chemical weathering minerals are changed into new minerals and mineral byproducts.
- Some minerals like halite and calcite may dissolve completely.
- Chemical weathering may change the size of pieces of rock materials, but definitely changes the composition.
- So one type of mineral changes into a different mineral.
- Chemical weathering works through chemical reactions that cause changes in the minerals.
<h3>Hope it helps you !!</h3>
Sodium hydrogen carbonate is a weak base because it is not a water soluble hydroxide.
Answer:
0.0249 moles in 1 g of Ca
Explanation:
Let's think in the molar mass of Ca.
Ca = 40.08 g/mol
So 1 mol weighs 40.08 grams, or in the opposite 40.08 grams is the weigh of 1 mol
The rule of three will be:
40.08 g are contained in 1 mol
1 g may be contained in (1 . 1) / 40.08 = 0.0249 moles
The formula to calculate buoyant force (FB) states that the upward force exerted on an immersed object is equal to the density (ρ ) of the fluid multiplied by both the fluid’s displaced volume (V) and the gravitational acceleration (g), or
FB = ρ x V x g.<span>
I hope that helped with what you're doing.
You can also try water displacement in a graduated cylinder.</span>