Answer:
Tea is getting hot on the stove.
2) As the tea and water gets hot, some combined molecules of tea and water will escape from the teapot.
3) Those escaped molecules now have the entire free space of the entire room to float around in, which they do (because they have high kinetic energy due to being heated).
4) Hence, in this scenario, your nose will detect a few of those molecules and you smell hot or warm tea.
5) Cold tea would be a different story. Cold beverages like cold tea do not have the kinetic energy where molecules can 'break free' of the surrounding container. Someone could be sitting in the room having a can or bottle of cold tea and you would not notice that when you walked in the door.
To answer the question above, substitute the given values to the given equation,
Q(t) = Q x e^-kt
12 grams = (36 grams) x e^(-0.00011)(t)
Solving for t gives t = 9,987.38 years or approximately equal to 9,990 years. Thus, the answer is letter C.
Answer:
Potassium cation = K⁺²
Explanation:
The metal cation in K₂SO₄ is K⁺². While the anion is SO₄²⁻.
All the metals have tendency to lose the electrons and form cation. In given compound the metal is potassium so it should form the cation. The overall compound is neutral.
The charge on sulfate is -2. While the oxidation state of potassium is +1. So in order to make compound overall neutral there should be two potassium cation so that potassium becomes +2 and cancel the -2 charge on sulfate and make the charge on compound zero.
2K⁺² , SO₄²⁻
K₂SO₄
1 mole = 6.22 x 10^23 molecules (Avogadro's number)
15 moles x (6.22 x 10^23) = 9.33 x 10^24 atoms
Explanation:
Both cohesion and molecular interchange contribute to liquid viscosity. The impact of increasing the temperature of a liquid is to reduce the cohesive forces while simultaneously increasing the rate of molecular interchange. The former effect causes a decrease in the shear stress while the latter causes it to increase.
temperature?
The viscosity of liquids decreases rapidly with an increase in temperature, and the viscosity of gases increases with an increase in temperature. Thus, upon heating, liquids flow more easily, whereas gases flow more sluggishly.
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