It tells you if a chemical/liquid is either Alkaline or Acid
(Alkaline showing in the blue section in the high numbers and the Acid showing in the red areas withe the low numbers).
It will have sour taste. When pH is measured using a pH metre it shows a value below 7. Or use pH paper to find pH of the acid solution.
PH 75 is the most acid.
pH 9 - pH 4 = pH 5 It is stronger by 5 pH.
Most acidic is substance of pH of 2, then of pH of 5 and the substance of pH 7 is neutral and the substance of pH 11 is basic
The lower the pH, the more acidic the solution is. Remember, pH 7.0 is H2O. As pH decreases below 7, the solution's acidity increases. As pH increase above 7, the basicity of the solution increases. Hence, in the choices you provided, pH 1.0 is most acidic.
It will have sour taste. When pH is measured using a pH metre it shows a value below 7. Or use pH paper to find pH of the acid solution.
1000 years in a millennium
Its when the acid and the bases both use oxygen as a compromediac molecule, therefore leaving the pH scale on an unportable metre. Although many speculate whether the hydro-components in both these type of akalies but this is often not excused.
The only reason a metre would need to be called a "linear metre" is to distinguish it between a "square metre" (1 metre in length timesed by one metre in width) and a "cubic metre" (1 metre in length timesed by one metre in width timesed by one metre in height).Therefore, one linear metre is the same measurement as one metre.
A metre cannot be converted to a square metre. A metre is a length and a square meter is an area.
It is 1 cubic metre.
1/4 of a metre is 25% of a metre
A linear (lineal) metre is the same thing as a metre. I think it's a dumbed down term for a metre so people won't get confused with metre, square metre and cubic metre.
Because if it wasn't, there would be something else that was and then that would be a metre.
A metre is 100cm
500.60 metre high 500.60 metre high 500.60 metre high 500.60 metre high
The basic formula is 1 cubic metre = 1 metre x 1 metre x 1 metre.