Answer: 15 grams of salt are there in 5 L of solution.
Explanation:
Concentration of a solution is defined as the number of grams of solute dissolved per liter of the solution.
Given : Concentration of solution : 3 g/L
1 Liter of solution contains = 3 gram of salt
Thus 5 L of solution contains = 
Thus 15 grams of salt are there in 5 L of solution.
Answer:
Explanation:
I'm not sure what is being asked, not the units of "1.5." I don't know of potassium "ioxicide." Was "dioxide" intended?
I'll assume the question is "What is the concentration, in Molar, of 1.5g of potassium dioxide in 150cm^3 of water (150cm^3 is 150 ml).
The molar mass of K2O, potassium dioxide, is 94.2 g/mole. 1.5g is (1.5g/94.2 g/mole) or 0.0159 moles of K2O. The definition of Molar is moles/liter. So take the moles of K2O and divide by the liters, which is 0.150L in this case.
(0.0159 moles K2)/0.150 L = 0.106 M K2O
Answer:
Classifying stars according to their spectrum is a very powerful way to begin to understand how they work. As we said last time, the spectral sequence O, B, A, F, G, K, M is a temperature sequence, with the hottest stars being of type O (surface temperatures 30,000-40,000 K), and the coolest stars being of type M (surface temperatures around 3,000 K). Because hot stars are blue, and cool stars are red, the temperature sequence is also a color sequence. It is sometimes helpful, though, to classify objects according to two different properties. Let's say we try to classify stars according to their apparent brightness, also. We could make a plot with color on one axis, and apparent brightness on the other axis, like this:
Explanation: