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I think the correct answer would be false. The atomic mass of chlorine does not represent the mass of the most common naturally occurring isotope of chlorine. The atomic mass of any compound is the average of the atomic masses of the naturally occurring isotopes of an element. <span />
Left Panel
The trick is to look at the protons, all other things being equal. The yellow spheres are neutrons we are led to believe. All the diagrams show the same number of electrons(2), so there is no help there.
The upper left
The upper right
The Lower left
All have 2 protons and 2 electrons. <<<< Answer Read the 3 lines above.
The center one has only 1 proton And the lower right has 3. Both of them are wrong.
Right Panel
You have answered this one correctly
Answer: this question is 3 days ago? Omg
Answer:
Explanation:
Use the ideal gas equation:

Where:
- p is pressure: 0.950atm
- V is volume: unknown
- n is number of moles: unknown
- R is the universal constat of gases: 0.08206 atm.liter/ (K.mol)
- T is the absolute temperature: 345K
Use the <em>molar mass</em> of the gas to include the density in the formula:
- molar mass = mass in grams / number of moles
- ⇒ mass in grams = number of moles × molar mass
- density = mass in grams / volume
- ⇒ density = number of moles × molar mass / volume
- density = (n/V) × molar mass
- ⇒ n/V = density / molar mass
Clear n/V from the gas ideal equation and subsittute with density/molar mass:
- density / molar mass = n/V
- density/molar mass = p/(RT)
- molar mass = density × RT / p
Now you can subsitute the data:
molar mass = (3.50g/liter) × 0.08206 atm.liter/(K.mol) × 345K / 0.950 atm
- Round to the nearest whole number: 104g/mol ← answer