Want this question answered?
Placing coefficients in front of compounds or elements or poly-atomic ions to balance the number of atoms of different elements between the reactants side and the products side. Ex. CH4 + 2 O2 CO2 + 2 H2O
The Subscripts in a Chemical formula explain how the atoms in that compound are chemically bonded. As a fraction of an atom cannot bond, the subscripts cannot be fractions. Coefficients, however which go before a chemical formula in chemical equations may be fractions. This is because they explain the ratio of the number of moles of each species required for the reaction and it is possible to have a fraction of a mole of something. The Subscripts in a Chemical formula explain how the atoms in that compound are chemically bonded. As a fraction of an atom cannot bond, the subscripts cannot be fractions. Coefficients, however which go before a chemical formula in chemical equations may be fractions. This is because they explain the ratio of the number of moles of each species required for the reaction and it is possible to have a fraction of a mole of something.
I don't remember all of the mathematical names, but I do remember that you need to balance equations so that both sides will be equal. These are very simple examples but they will show you that balanced equations are equivalentto being equal.Such as: (2+2)=4=(3+1) Both sides equal '4'.Differing equations on opposite sides of the equal sign demonstrate that are differing ways to express a certain figure.Or: (2+6)-(3x1)=5=(2x2)+(4-3) Here both sides equal '5'.(8) - (3) =5= (4) + (1)Hope this helps.
Because it's fun
an advertisement for a cosmetic powder claims that the product is"chemical-free."Explain why this is impossible
No
Fjdydhrydhdydudhdhrydurfjfufufhfhfhxhf
Placing coefficients in front of compounds or elements or poly-atomic ions to balance the number of atoms of different elements between the reactants side and the products side. Ex. CH4 + 2 O2 CO2 + 2 H2O
A chemical equation lets humans explain a chemical reaction. When the same reaction occurs repeatedly, the equation serves to remind us of what happened in the reaction.
I think that a chemical equation tells a chemist that substances you start with and substances you end with
A chemical equation lets humans explain a chemical reaction. When the same reaction occurs repeatedly, the equation serves to remind us of what happened in the reaction.
conservation of mass law, no matter is ever created or destroyed (except for nuclear fusion)
WHAT does that even make sense!@#$%^&*()((()())())!@#$%^&*()_+~`-=+?/"'.>,<!
can't be explained in chemical equation as it is nuclear. reaction is fusion of ionized hydrogen nuclei into ionized helium nuclei. every other hydrogen nucleus transforms from a proton to a neutron in the process.
The Subscripts in a Chemical formula explain how the atoms in that compound are chemically bonded. As a fraction of an atom cannot bond, the subscripts cannot be fractions. Coefficients, however which go before a chemical formula in chemical equations may be fractions. This is because they explain the ratio of the number of moles of each species required for the reaction and it is possible to have a fraction of a mole of something. The Subscripts in a Chemical formula explain how the atoms in that compound are chemically bonded. As a fraction of an atom cannot bond, the subscripts cannot be fractions. Coefficients, however which go before a chemical formula in chemical equations may be fractions. This is because they explain the ratio of the number of moles of each species required for the reaction and it is possible to have a fraction of a mole of something.
I don't remember all of the mathematical names, but I do remember that you need to balance equations so that both sides will be equal. These are very simple examples but they will show you that balanced equations are equivalentto being equal.Such as: (2+2)=4=(3+1) Both sides equal '4'.Differing equations on opposite sides of the equal sign demonstrate that are differing ways to express a certain figure.Or: (2+6)-(3x1)=5=(2x2)+(4-3) Here both sides equal '5'.(8) - (3) =5= (4) + (1)Hope this helps.
Yes, it is conserved. The explanation is quite simple: linear momentum is always conserved. There are no known exceptions.