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Ber [7]
4 years ago
8

Which of these changes involve forming or breaking new bonds?

Chemistry
1 answer:
timurjin [86]4 years ago
3 0
B-Boiling and Melting
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Bonds between metals and nonmetals tend to be ionic, but bonds between nonmetal atoms tend to be covalent.
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O i get it it does not stik on metal eater way
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Match the following metric terms. 1. the basic measure of mass in the metric system meter 2. prefix meaning one-hundredth (.01)
lidiya [134]

Answer: Here's the answer hope this helps

Explanation:

8 0
4 years ago
Question 1 2.3 kJ is how many J?​
Vinil7 [7]

Answer:

2300J

Explanation:

1 kilojoule is 1000joules so to get how much is 2.3 multiply it with 1000

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3 years ago
What is the molar mass of PCL3
antiseptic1488 [7]
The molar mass for PCL3 is 137.33 g/mol
8 0
3 years ago
Which of the following would you except to see in the death of a star that is less than 0.5 solar mass
Ket [755]

B. White Dwarf.

<h3>Explanation</h3>

The star would eventually run out of hydrogen fuel in the core. The core would shrink and heats up. As the temperature in the core increases, some of the helium in the core will undergo the triple-alpha process to produce elements such as Be, C, and O. The triple-alpha process will heat the outer layers of the star and blow them away from the core. This process will take a long time. Meanwhile, a planetary nebula will form.

As the outer layers of gas leave the core and cool down, they become no longer visible. The only thing left is the core of the star. Consider the Chandrasekhar Limit:

Chandrasekhar Limit: 1.4 \;M_\odot.

A star with core mass smaller than the Chandrasekhar Limit will not overcome electron degeneracy and end up as a white dwarf. Most of the outer layer of the star in question here will be blown away already. The core mass of this star will be only a fraction of its 0.5 \;M_\odot, which is much smaller than the Chandrasekhar Limit.

As the star completes the triple alpha process, its core continues to get smaller. Eventually, atoms will get so close that electrons from two nearby atoms will almost run into each other. By Pauli Exclusion Principle, that's not going to happen. Electron degeneracy will exert a strong outward force on the core. It would balance the inward gravitational pull and prevent the star from collapsing any further. The star will not go any smaller. Still, it will gain in temperature and glow on the blue end of the spectrum. It will end up as a white dwarf.

7 0
3 years ago
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