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Economic opportunities for the people will improve.
If water would be a non polar molecule all the life chemistry would be changed or would not be possible. This non polar liquid would be unable to be a quasi-universal solvent.
The word 'polar' defines the latitude. Should the latitude change it would no longer be polar.
No, SiH4 is not polar. It is nonpolar. It is considered nonpolar because it does not have permanent dipole moments.
the Oxygen-Fluorine bond is polar, as the fluorine is more electronegative than the Oxygen, the Fluorine would be the negative side
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It is polar. It has a lone pair of electrons and it's molecular geometry is seesaw.
A polar solute would be insoluble in a non-polar solvent. The rule of thumb is "likes dissolve likes".
The "Muckraker" journalists would have been likely to cover all of the following subjects EXCEPT
The "Muckraker" journalists would have been likely to cover all of the following subjects EXCEPT
the atmosphere
You can find them in every ocean across the world, except polar regions
I would have said "phospholipid" except that it's hardly a "macromolecule" by my standards (I'm a polymer chemist by training).
trhry
Economic opportunities for the people will improve.
Sea levels would rise all round the world, flooding coastal towns and croplands.
The question asks about the "following". In such circumstances would it be too much to expect that you make sure that there is something that is following?