1) Write out the equation with molecular formula.
2) Identify the elements present on each side of the equation.
3) Count how many of each are on each side - and attempt to balance from there.
* Any good examples of equation balancing would be good to add to anyone answering.
adjusting coefficients to the smallest whole-number ratio.
balanced. even. equal.
Do you mean stoichiometry? The equations need to be balanced so they are stable. They just need to be balanced...
I believe it is already balanced. No coefficients neccessary
The balanced equation is 2HCl + K2O -> H2O + 2KCl.
FeCl2 + CoCl3
To find the x or x's values
NaHCO3 + H2O = H2CO3 +OH + Na
To find the volume on a rectangular prism, the equaton is: length*width*height
nee amma puku
adjusting coefficients to the smallest whole-number ratio.
An atom in an equaton is only the symbol of this element, not a molecule.
3r - 9r = 18 wright equaton -6r = 18 combine like terms r = -3 solve
if the equation was 7x = 42. The answer would be x = 6
if the linear equation is x+y=1 means we are having the graph points (1,0) (2,-1)....using this graph we can draw the graph
Laos, because it is more closer to the equaton. Not 100% sure though more like 50-50.
Kenneth Blanchard and Norman Vincent Peale advise the use of the three-step model when evaluating an ethical dilemma. The three steps are to ask yourself the following: Is it legal, Is it balanced, and How does it make me feel? Tangie-hope it helps :)