S-36
P-35
S-32
P-33
P-32
P-31
Answer:
Depends from where the light is
Explanation:
If it is in the north pole than it will be 0°C
Answer:
You cannot freeze light.
Explanation:
Only some scientists have been able to freeze light. But, they have only been able to freeze light for about 1 minute.
Neutron capture reactions.
Isotopes of the same element have the same number of protons in each nucleus. However, their nucleus differ in the number of neutrons. Adding one or more neutrons to a nucleus will converts it to a different isotope of the same element.
Neutrons can be produced with a particle accelerator. The researcher might aim fast moving alpha particles from the accelerator at a beryllium Be target.
Doing so will convert beryllium-9 to carbon-12 and release one neutron.
The neutron produced in this process moves very fast ("fast neutrons"). It might knock protons or alpha particles off the target nucleus. This is undesirable since the nucleus will have a change in its proton number. It will end up belonging to a different element.
The researcher should reduce the speed of those neutrons. Passing neutrons through moderators greatly reduces their speed. Moderators are materials that are rich in light nuclei. They remove the energy of neutrons as the two collide. Examples of moderators are heavy water (D₂O) and graphite (carbon). Slow neutrons are easier to capture than fast-moving ones. Combining those slow-moving neutrons to the source isotope will likely produce a different isotope of the same element.
Vitz, Ed. et. al, "19.5: Neutron Bombardment", ChemPRIME (Moore et al.), Libretexts Chemistry, 2017
Answer:
D. BY ADDING OR REMOVING NEUTRONS.
Hope this helps!
Explanation:
- Use 6.022x1023 for avogadro’s number
- Ignore sig figs and do not round the final answer.
- Keep it to 1 decimal place.
Answer:
a) 13.2 moles
b) 79.33 grams of
Explanation:
First, we'll need to balance the equation
→
There are 2 (O) on the left and only one on the right, so we'll add a 2 coefficient to the right.
→
Now there are 4 (H) on the right and only 2 on the left, so we'll add a 2 coefficient to the () on the left.
→
The equation is now balanced.
a) This can be solved with a simple mole ratio.
4.6 moles × = 13.2 moles
b) This problem is solved the same way!
2.2 moles × = 2.2 moles
However, this problem wants the mass of , not the moles.
The molecular weight of is the weight of 4 (H) molecules and 2 (O) molecules (found on the periodic table). So,
4(1.008) + 2(15.999) = 36.03 g/mol
2.2 moles × = 79.33 grams of