A Venn Diagram seems to be your best bet.
A diagram can be found in the related links.
Phase diagrams typically show the boundaries between the different phases based on 2 or more variables. For 2 factor diagrams the variables may be temperature & pressure, volume & pressure (often with isotherms superimposed), temperature & composition, or (in the case of a 3 dimensional diagram, temperature, pressure & volume (where instead of isotherm lines, temperature becomes a variable on one of the 3 axes). The choice of variables depends on what you need to compare.
when a sets of data can be separated by 2 orders of variables, which are the independent & dependent variables.
2 x 2 x 2 x 3 = 24
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When the data on the graph is continuous,it does make sense to connect the points on the graph of 2 related variables.
Diagram 1: 1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^4 This is the correct electron configuration for Sulfur with atomic number 16.
A Venn diagram is a diagram that shows relationships between 2 things or concepts using circles if there are similarities between both then you overlap the circles.
A direct correlation, it appears as a straight line on a graph and occurs when variables are related as y=xk.
A diagram is not needed because 2 is a prime number whose only factors are itself and one which makes it a prime number in common with all other prime numbers.
It is oxygen group elements
1. Draw a free-body diagram if applicable. 2. Identify what variables are known and what variables are sought. 3. Identify equations that relate the variables. 4. Do computations. 5. Do a reasonableness check: is the answer reasonable? If not, try solving the problem a different way to see if you get the same solution.