The purpose of spraying Oranges with cold water is to prevent them from cooling to the temperature of the frigid air. This helps to preserve the oranges against damage that could be caused by the cold.
YesFor some reason the citric acid sprayed from an orange peel when it is bent or squeezed is highly flammable and will burn up when exposed to flame. So yes, it would affect a fire by making a it larger for a brief second.
Burette Methyl orange Phenolphthalein Pipette
Burette Methyl orange Phenolphthalein Pipette
I Don’t know
Brown - chestnut perhaps, if your orange is blood orange (a red orange)
I lived in rural NW Arkansas during the 70's. The U.S. Forest Service sprayed Agent Orange to defoliate and private individuals (farmers) used it to defoliate prior to grass seeding steep hillsides for pasture.
Agent Orange was the toxic, leaf-killing chemical sprayed over Vietnam.
they didnt. they sprayed it in Vietnam
Agent Orange was sprayed from helicopters to keep the vegetation from growing.
Agent Orange was used in Vietnam to clear ground cover around military positions. The major ingredient was Dioxin, a highly toxic chemical both for plants and for humans.
Close to 4 million acres were sprayed.
When sprayed from a plane, as it was in Vietnam, Agent Orange looks like a white or orange opaque mist. It feels very oily.
No, but it was sprayed on Lackland. It was the best weed killer the Army ever saw, so they used it everywhere.
many orange juice growers do this because when ice is sprayed over the plant it serves as an insulator
The government sprayed it all over the land during the war to kill back overgrown vegetation and it contained chemicals that had adverse affects of people. Really bad stuff.
Agent Orange was a herbicide blend containing two chemicals known as 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T. It was primarily used as a liquid, which was sprayed from aircraft and other devices during the Vietnam War to defoliate forests and destroy crops.
According to the US Veterans Administration's Agent Orange program; Approximately 20 million gallons of agents were used, which consisted of mainly Agent's White, Blue, and Orange. Of which Agent Orange was the most commonly used.