1 to 2 Felt slightly by some people. No damage to buildings.
<span>
3 to 4 </span><span>Often felt by people, but very rarely causes damage. Shaking of indoor objects can be noticeable.
</span>
<span>5 to 6 <span>Noticeable shaking of indoor objects and rattling noises. Felt by most people in the affected area. Slightly felt outside. Generally causes none to minimal damage. Moderate to significant damage very unlikely. Some objects may fall off shelves or be knocked over.
Hope this helps :)
just look up Richter Magnitude scale </span></span>
im not even sure tbh these are really hard im so sorry
ANSWERS:
They are both ionic compounds.
These compounds are made up of
cations (positively-charged ion) and either
or
anions (negatively-charged ions).
Their names both end in -ic acid.
Acids are named based on their anion. With acids like these where the anion is attached to a hydrogen cation, we name such acids with the the suffix “-ic”.
They both contain polyatomic ionic.
and
are both polyatomic ions.
"Poly-" = many
"ions" = have a + or - charge
So, yes, these are ions that are made up of several atoms (not just one atom like
)
Carl Linnaeus wrote it in 1735 originally in Latin language
A virus, because it has a non-cellular structure.