Does mass<span> alone provide no information about the amount or size of a measured quantity? No, we need combine </span>mass<span> and </span>volume<span> into "one equation" to </span>determine<span> "</span>density<span>" provides more ... </span>g/mL<span>. An </span>object has<span> a mass of </span>75 grams<span> and a volume of </span>25 cc<span>. ... A </span>certain object weighs 1.25 kg<span> and </span>has<span> a </span>density of<span> </span>5.00 g/<span>mL</span>
In order to find molarity, you must first find the number of moles that was dissolved.
Now, Moles = Mass ÷ Molar Mass
⇒ Moles of NaCl = 2.922 g ÷ 58.44 g/mol
= 0.05 moles
∴ the Molarity of the NaCl is 0.05 M [Option 1]
Frequency is defined as the number of waves per second. In this machine 25 waves pass in one second.
We need to calculate the number of waves that pass a particular point during one second.
During 2 seconds -25 waves
Therefore in one second - 25/2 = 12.5 waves/s.
1 wave per second has the unit Hertz (Hz)
Therefore answer is 12.5 Hz