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kobusy [5.1K]
3 years ago
8

You have a hard glass flask that you plug up with a stopper at room temperature (25 C) and an internal pressure of 1 atm. If you

decrease the temperature inside the flask to 5 C, what will the pressure be inside the flask?
Chemistry
1 answer:
liubo4ka [24]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

pressure of 0atm

Explanation:

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Make a timeline graph of the develop-
Artist 52 [7]

Answer:

Date Event

442 BC Thinking about matter

Democritus, a Greek philosopher, co-originated the thought (with his teacher, Leucippus) that all matter is composed of indivisible elements.

1803 John Dalton and atoms

John Dalton, a British chemist and physicist, developed a theory that matter is simply composed of atoms of different weights and is combined in ratios by weight. Also proposed that these atoms are spherical, and are in motion.

1870 Cathode ray tube and TV (1870's)

Sir William Crookes constructed a primitive cathode ray tube, which later became the basis for television.

1896 X-rays developed

Wilhelm Rontgen discovered that certain chemicals glowed when exposed to cathode rays. These rays weren't deflected by a magnetic field produced in the cathode ray tube. He named these X-rays.

1898 Radiation, energy, and the atom

Pierre and Marie Curie theorized that radioactive particles cause atoms to break down, then releasing radiation that takes the form of energy and subatomic particles.

1898 Electrons discovered

JJ Thomson discovers the electron, using properties of cathode rays.

1900 Early quantum theory developed

Max Planck introduced what would be known as quantum theory, stating that electromagnetic energy could only be emitted in quantized form. His quanta are now called photons by physicists.

1905 Einstein and the nature of light

Albert Einstein, creates special and general theories of relativity, and hypothesizes about the particle nature of light. This was the basis of nuclear energy.

1908 Charge of an electron measured (1908-1917)

Robert Millikan measured the charge of a single electron. This is known as the elementary charge, one of the fundamental physical constants.

1909- Structure of an atom developed (1909-1911)

Ernest Rutherford known as the father of nuclear physics, developed the theory for the structure of the atom. He used a gold foil experiment, observing the scattering of alpha particles, and demonstrated for the first time the existence of the atomic nucleus.

1913 Bohr improves the atomic model

Neils Bohr developed the Bohr atomic model, with electrons travelling in orbits around the nucleus, and chemical properties being determined by how many electrons are in the outer orbits. He also integrated the Planck quantum theory, stating that when electrons change orbits they emit a quantum of discrete energy.

1926 Math describes electron changes

Erwin Shrodinger described how electrons move in wave form, and developed the Schrodinger equation which describes how the quantum state of a system changes with time.

1931 The neutron is discovered

James Chadwick discovers the neutron component of the atomic nucleus, explaining the nuclear fission of uranium 235. This also made it possible to produce elements heavier than uranium in the lab.

1938 Nuclear fission developed

Otto Hahn, regarded as the father of nuclear chemistry, discovers nuclear fission, along with Lise Meitner.

1951 Nuclear medicine and I-131

Glenn Seaborg, many discoveries of the transuranium elements, as well as many advances in nuclear medicine, including the development of I-131 for thyroid disease.

1964 Elementary particles smaller than the atom Murray Gell

Mann proposes the quark model (independently George Zweig does as well), which describes elementary particles that have no substructure (and therefore can't be split).

Explanation:

mark as brainliest plss!!!

8 0
3 years ago
Which stratigraphic principle states the fact that sedimentary rocks are deposited in layers perpendicular to the direction of g
Anvisha [2.4K]

Answer:

omework Help. Steno's laws of stratigraphy describe the patterns in which rock layers are deposited. The four laws are the law of superposition, law of original horizontality, law of cross-cutting relationships, and law of lateral continuity.

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
Does a pool of water and a piece of ice have different chemical properties?
worty [1.4K]
No because they are both made up of H2O molecules; they only have different physical properties, one is in liquid state while the other is in solid state
5 0
3 years ago
1.5 L of gas held under 1.0 atm, has the pressure increased to 303.9kPa, what is the new volume of the gas, if the temperature i
Ronch [10]

Answer: 1/2L

Explanation:

Volume and pressure are changed, so use Boyle's law.

P1V1=P2V2

Convert 303.9kpa to atm by mutiplying by (1/101.3)=3atm

Plug in:

1.5(1)=3(V2)

V2=1/2 L

This makes sense since volume and pressure are inversely proportional. The pressure is increased, so the volume must decrease.

6 0
3 years ago
The 1s orbital(s) do(es) not have any nodes. the 1s orbital(s) has(have) a node at the nucleus. the 3d orbital(s) has(have) a cl
Whitepunk [10]
I actually couldn't guess at first what the question is. But looking closely at the statements, I deduced that some are correct and some are not. So, I think this is a true or false problem. So,

<span>The 1s orbital(s) do(es) not have any nodes. - This is false. Nodes are the planes that the orbitals do not fill. The formula for the number of nodes is:

N = n - l
where 
n is the energy level
l is 0 for s subshell, 1 for p subshell, 2 for d subshell, 3 for f subshell; l also signifies the number of angular nodes.
Thus,
N = 1 - 0 = 1 node

</span><span>The 1s orbital(s) has(have) a node at the nucleus. Since this is the opposite of the first statement, this is true.

</span><span>The 3d orbital(s) has(have) a cloverleaf shape, with four lobes of electron density around the nucleus and two perpendicular nodal planes. 
This is true. The shape of d subshell is cloverleaf, and all have four lobes. Since l=2, there are 2 perpendicular or angular nodes.

</span><span>The f orbitals are even more complex. This is true. The f subshell is the last subshell. It has complex shapes and it rarely comes up in chemistry.

</span><span><em>The number of nodes (and nodal planes) depends on the specific orbital, but there will be more than for s, p, or d orbitals. </em><em />This is false. In fact, f orbitals have more nodes because l = 3. That means they always have 3 angular nodes, which is greater than the other subshells.</span>
5 0
3 years ago
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