Chapter 1: Problem 9
When you convert units, how do you decide which part of the conversion factor is in the numerator and which is in the denominator? [Section 1.6]
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Chapter 1: Problem 9
When you convert units, how do you decide which part of the conversion factor is in the numerator and which is in the denominator? [Section 1.6]
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What exponential notation do the following abbreviations represent: (a) \(\mathrm{d},(\mathrm{b}) \mathrm{c},(\mathrm{c}) \mathrm{f},(\mathrm{d}) \mu,(\mathrm{e}) \mathrm{M},(\mathrm{f}) \mathrm{k},(\mathrm{g}) \mathrm{n}\), (h) \(\mathrm{m}\), (i) \(\mathrm{p}\) ?
Suppose you are given a sample of a homogeneous liquid. What would you do to determine whether it is a solution or a pure substance?
A \(15.0\) -cm long cylindrical glass tube, sealed at one end, is filled with ethanol. The mass of ethanol needed to fill the tube is found to be \(11.86 \mathrm{~g}\). The density of ethanol is \(0.789 \mathrm{~g} / \mathrm{mL}\). Calculate the inner diameter of the tube in centimeters.
Identify each of the following as measurements of length, area, volume, mass, density, time, or temperature: (a) \(5 \mathrm{~ns}\), (b) \(5.5 \mathrm{~kg} / \mathrm{m}^{3}\), (c) \(0.88 \mathrm{pm}\), (d) \(540 \mathrm{~km}^{2}\), (e) \(173 \mathrm{~K}\), (f) \(2 \mathrm{~mm}^{3}\), (g) \(23^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\). [Section 1.4]
In 1807 the English chemist Humphry Davy passed an electric current through molten potassium hydroxide and isolated a bright, shiny reactive substance. He claimed the discovery of a new element, which he named potassium. In those days, before the advent of modern instruments, what was the basis on which one could claim that a substance was an element?
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