Answer:
The immature prefrontal cortex lead to conflict for teens because the teenagers when they try to use the frontal lobe for reasoning, they tend to overdo it and then giving their brain much work to do. This leads to conflict in teens.
Explanation:
In teens, the prefrontal cortex is immature and develops until the mid-20s of their age. It covers the front part of the frontal lobe. As a result of the immaturity of the prefrontal cortex in teens, they do not think or make decisions like that of adults. When they try to overdo with their immature prefrontal cortex, they end up in conflicts.
Work is the transfer of energy that occurs when an object is moved over a distance.
Answer: All of them seem to apply.
Explanation:
A., Its important to know if your car that is being collided is a small car or big truck, as they will end up effecting who gets hurt the most.
B., Same thing as A. but with the other vehicle.
C., The velocity matters a lot with a collision, since a slow crash won't have as much damage as a car going fast and hitting someone. Also it won't be as likely to be fatal if the car crashing into you is going slow.
D., This is the only one I'm not too sure on, but it seems like how fast the car can accelerate once collided with would be a big factor on whether it would come to a halt or skid across the road.
Proteins are apart of this group