Answer:
A saturated solution
Explanation:
A saturated solution is one that contains the most amount of solute that can be dissolved in it at a given temperature
An example of a saturated solution is carbonated water, which readily gives off bubbles of carbon dioxide gas from areas within the solution to the region above the top surface of the gas in liquid solution
A saturation solution of salt in water can be created by continuing to dissolve salt in a given amount of water until it can no longer dissolve any more salt. However, heating the saturated salt solution, increases the amount of salt that can be dissolved.
Therefore, a solution that contains all of the solute it can normally hold at a given temperature is <u>a saturated solution</u>
Answer:
a. 12 m/s² down
Explanation:
Acceleration has units of length per time squared. Acceleration is a vector, so it also has a direction.
** Missing info: Lines per mm = 500 **
Ans: The wavelength is = λ = 1414.21 nm
Explanation:
The formula for diffraction grading is:
dsinθ = mλ --- (1)
Where
d = 1/lines-per-meter = (1/500)*10^-3 = 2 * 10^-6
m = order = 1
λ = wavelength
θ = 45°
Plug in the values in (1):
(1) => 2*10^-6*sin(45°) = (1)λ
=> λ = 1414.21 nm
Kinetic energy is never negative, but potential energy can be.
Potential energy depends on height above some reference level,
and you can pick any level you want as the reference. So, if the
object is below the reference level you pick, then its potential
energy relative to your reference level is negative.
What that means is: You have to lift it / do work on it / give it more
energy than it has now ... in order to move it to the reference level.
(That's exactly the situation with electrons bound to an atom. Their
energy is considered negative, because we have to do work and
give them more energy to rip them away from the atom.)
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Regarding the other choices:
-- Kinetic energy is scalar ... Yes. So is potential energy.
-- Kinetic energy increases with height ...
No. It doesn't, but potential energy does.
-- Kinetic energy depends on position ...
No. It doesn't, but potential energy does.
Class 1 lever
Explanation:
In a class 1 lever, the fulcrum is placed between the effort and the load. This lever systems is the most common.
- The effort is the force input and the load is the force output
- The fulcrum is a hinge between the load and effort.
- Movement of the effort and load are in opposite directions.
- There are other classes of lever like the class 2 and 3.
- They all have different load, fulcrum and effort configurations
learn more:
Load related problems brainly.com/question/9202964
Torque brainly.com/question/5352966
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