Well i would say you lose your first molar between 5 and 7 years old.
Molar conductivity at infinite dilution is when molar conductivity is limited. Molar conductivity is when electrolyte conductivity is divided by molar concentration.
The molar mass of NaCl (sodium chloride) is 58.44 g/mol. To find the molar mass of 3.00 mol of NaCl, you would multiply 3.00 mol by the molar mass of NaCl. For the 1.50 kg, you would first convert the mass from kilograms to grams (1 kg = 1000 g), then divide the mass by the molar mass to find the number of moles.
Five (when Carabelli cusp is present)
The molar mass of glucose is 180,16 g.
molarity simply means molar concentration. To calculate molar concentration, c: c = n / V where c=molar concentration (moldm-3) n=number of moles V=volume(dm3) V can also be cm3 but it needed to be converted first to dm3.
It depends...
if we lose our teeth we cannot crush and grind our food
Well i would say you lose your first molar between 5 and 7 years old.
if they're your adult teeth the won't grow back. I got my 1st and 2nd molar removed on the same side on 2 sides and they were next 2 eachother.
Yes, you lose your second molar. The permanent tooth will grow in as usual.
yes but not the very back ones
You lose your baby first molars at 9-11 years of age baby second molars at 10-12 years of age Hope that helps.
When the mesial buccal cusp of the maxillary first molar is distal to the mesial buccal cusp of the mandibular first molar.
12-13 years of age
Yes.
There are three main classifications of bite arrangement. Class I: First molars are in normal relation Class II: Lower first molar is behind upper first molar Class III: Lower first molar is in front of upper first molar There are several ways of treating.
Nothing, she just got her molar first is all.