Answer:
Yep. Many of the sounds we associate with white noise are actually pink noise, or brown, or green, or blue. In audio engineering, there's a whole rainbow of noise colors, each with its own unique properties, that are used to produce music, help relaxation, and describe natural rhythms like the human heartbeat.
Explanation:
Answer:
Carbohydrates------Benedict test
Starch and glycogen --------I2KI test
Proteins--------Biuret test
Lipids-------Paper test
Nucleic acids------None of the above
Explanation:
Benedict's Test is can be used to detect simple carbohydrates. The Benedict's test can detect reducing sugars (monosaccharide's and some disaccharides), having free ketone or aldehyde functional groups.
The Biuret Test shows the presence of peptide bonds, which are the basis for proteins. These bonds makes the blue Biuret reagent turn purple. The rest is carried out by adding an equal amount of NaOH to a solution of the food, mix carefully and add a few drops of 1% CuSO4, without shaking the mixture.
Lipids form a translucent stain on paper while starch/glycogen turns I2/KI solution blue-black
Answer:
D) burning a candle
A demonstration that contains both physical and chemical changes will be BURNING OF A CANDLE.
<em>This is because when a candle is lighted up, on the top of it (where we see flame) the oxygen and other gases present around will be chemically changed (burned up)</em>
<em>When the wax in the top of the candle will get melted due to the heat of the fire a physical change takes places.</em>
Solid, Liquid, Gas, and Plasma