I've prepared some analysis and <span>cucumbers do have many comparable properties to potatoes, tomatoes, and lemons, all of which I know do work. So I would presume that cucumbers would also work. I would recommend trying it yourself to perceive. I'd love to hear the outcomes of your experiment. ;) </span>
Drugs interfere with the way neurons send, receive, and process signals via neurotransmitters. Some drugs, such as marijuana and heroin, can activate neurons because their chemical structure mimics that of a natural neurotransmitter in the body. This allows the drugs to attach onto and activate the neurons. Although these drugs mimic the brain’s own chemicals, they don’t activate neurons in the same way as a natural neurotransmitter, and they lead to abnormal messages being sent through the network.
Other drugs, such as amphetamine or cocaine, can cause the neurons to release abnormally large amounts of natural neurotransmitters or prevent the normal recycling of these brain chemicals by interfering with transporters. This too amplifies or disrupts the normal communication between neurons.
C is the answer because animals and plants need water.
<span>First - you need the empirical formula.
So, assume you have 100 g of the compound.
If so, you'll have 54.53 gram of C, 9.15 g of H and 36.32 g of O. Find the number of moles of each.
54.53 g C (1 mole C / 12.01 g C) = 4.540
9.15 g H (1 mole H / 1.008 g H) = 9.077
36.32 g O (1 mole O / 15.9994 g O) = 2.270
Take the smallest number found and divide the others by it to get the empirical formula.
4.540/2.270 = 2.
9.077/2.270 = 4.
2.270/2.270 =1.
So, that gives you the empirical formula of C2H4O.
Find the weight of this compound. C = 12, H = 1, O = 16. So, C2H4O is 44 amu.
132/44 = 3.
So, 3 (C2 H4 O) = C6H12O3 = molecular formula.</span>