Answer:
D.) All people can mate with one another and have children
Explanation:
B generate ideas not 100 percent positive though
The answer for the following question is explained below.
- <u><em>Therefore the work done is 130 kilo Joules.</em></u>
Explanation:
Work:
A force causing the movement or displacement of an object.
Given:
mass of the person (m) = 65 kg
height of the cliff (h) = 2000 m
To calculate:
work done (W)
We know;
According to the formula:
<u>W = m × g × h</u>
Where;
m represents mass of the person
g represents the acceleration due to gravity
where the value of g is;
<u> g = 10 m/ s²</u>
h represents the height of the cliff
From the above formula;
W = 65 × 10 × 2000
W = 130,000 J
W = 130 Kilo Joules
<u><em>Therefore the work done is 130 kilo Joules.</em></u>
Last month, we featured IRB best practices (“IRBs: Navigating the Maze” November 2007 Observer), and got the ball rolling with strategies and tips that psychological scientists have found to work. Here, we continue the dissemination effort with the second of three articles by researchers who share their experiences with getting their research through IRB hoops. Jerry Burger from Santa Clara University managed to do the seemingly impossible — he conducted a partial replication of the infamous Milgram experiment. Read on for valuable advice, and look for similar coverage in upcoming Observers. These are the first words I said to Muriel Pearson, producer for ABC News’ Primetime, when she approached me with the idea of replicating Stanley Milgram’s famous obedience studies. Milgram’s work was conducted in the early 1960s before the current system of professional guidelines and IRBs was in place. It is often held up as the prototypic example of why we need policies to protect the welfare of research participants. Milgram’s participants were placed in an emotionally excruciating situation in which an experimenter instructed them to continue administering electric shocks to another individual despite hearing that person’s agonizing screams of protest. The studies ignited a debate about the ethical treatment of participants. And the research became, as I often told my students, the study that can never be replicated. Hope this helps!
It's highly reactive and contains only one valence electron