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You can use rose, petunia, geranium etc. petals.
yon petal
Chemical
At very low temperatures, ductile materials go through a transition to brittleness - above this point they are more ductile and at their highest toughness, below this point they are brittle and have very low toughness (they simply shatter). The best example of this is the classic liquid nitrogen demo - take something that is easy to damage but can be deformed or torn (a flower petal is what I saw, paper probably works too, or a leaf), dip it in liquid nitrogen, drop it, and it will shatter. This effect also works for steel and all kinds of other ductile materials - though the forces needed to shatter it are such that it's not really safe to get close enough to see.Other than the ductile brittle transition effect, I have no idea.Source: My materials engineering course
You can use rose, petunia, geranium etc. petals.
just add rose petals to hot water, after some time u will notice the discoloration of the petal and the solution turning yellow..if u leave for a day the solution becomes red
in the chloroplast in the middle
no.Obviously didn't you see flower before,some have only 1 colour petal
petal means to either a flower petal or a petal on a bike
Acidic solutions: redBasic solutions: dark green to black
petal
The Petal Library is located at 714 South Main Street, Petal, MS 39465.
"petal" is a noun.
A petal is on the flower there is your obvious answer
The phone number of the Petal Library is: 601-584-7610.
petal (i.e. flower petal)