It can't ever be zero under any circumstances, because the body produces alcohol itself 24/7. It's called endogenous ethanol production.
17% .17
Yes with a valid license and a blood alcohol level of 0.
BAL in medicine and in police work means "blood alcohol level". BAC in medicine and in police work means "blood alcohol content". A BAL/BAC should be zero (0) in a person who has not consumed (drunk) any alcohol.
No. Actually no one has a BAC of zero because the human body produces ethanol 24/7. It's called endogenous ethanol production.
ax2+ bx + c = 0
ax2+ bx + c = 0
absolutely not, but keep in mind even if you never have had a drink, no one has a blood alcohol level of 0%. But that long of a time difference you will register the normal non-drinking human level.
You can't sober up quickly unless you throw up the alcohol in your stomach, but then it will remain in your blood. Once alcohol is in your blood the best you can do is wait and drink lots of water to try and eliminate it from your system. Depending on how drunk you are you will have to wait from 3 hours to 6 hours before your alcohol level is back to 0. But of course the fastest way is to NOT get drunk in the first place.
6300ml x 0.5% = 6300ml x 0.005 = 31.5 ml
It depends on the context. In a 0 tolerance situation, any level of detectably alcohol percentage is considered under the influence. If you are asking about the per se limit for driving and passing a breath test, the level is set by the individual states.
Please ! Too much information ! We don't need to know the man's weight, we don't need to know that the subject is a man, and we certainly don't need to know that you're talking about blood here. 0.5% of 6,300 mL = 0.005 x 6,300 = 31.5 mL
Think about it for a minute. If your blood alcohol is zero, you are not drunk. You have not likely had a drink. That would be the vast majority of drivers on the road. Logistically, it would be impossible to pull over all drivers and test them for 0% alcohol.