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Yes, the size of tablet pieces can affect the number of blobs created. Smaller pieces may dissolve more quickly and create more blobs compared to larger pieces, which may take longer to dissolve and create fewer blobs.
Breaking the tablet models the mechanical digestion process, where food is physically broken down into smaller pieces to increase its surface area for chemical digestion to occur effectively. This mimics the first step of digestion that occurs in the mouth when we chew our food.
The tablet is denser than water, however it floats! this is because it fizzes and the bubble stick to the tablet making a unit of gas and tablet that is less dense than water.
No, dissolving a fizzy tablet like vitamin C in water is a physical change. The tablet is still vitamin C molecules, just dispersed in the water. Chemical bonds in the vitamin C molecules are not broken during the dissolving process.
When a tablet, like an antacid, is dropped into soda, the acids in the soda react with the active ingredients in the tablet, causing it to dissolve and release gas. This reaction creates bubbles and fizz, while the tablet's components mix with the liquid.
It can take a few minutes to fully dissolve an antacid tablet in salt water, depending on the size of the tablet and the concentration of salt in the water. The effervescence of the antacid tablet will help to speed up the dissolution process.
The Tablet was created in 1840.
That means that you divide the tablet into for pieces of equal size, and take one of them.
Tablet of the Branch was created in 1867.
Tablet - newspaper - was created in 2000.
Fire Tablet was created in 1871.
ThinkPad Tablet was created in 2011.
Cruz - Tablet - was created in 1997.
Kočerin tablet was created in 1404.
Baška tablet was created in 1100.
Tablet Magazine was created in 2009.
Tablet of Destinies was created in 2001.
The computer companies created the word tablet