Chiral molecules have mirror-image isomers
No. Some stereoisomers (but not all) could fit that description.
enantiomers -
Chiral
enantiomers
In theory, an infinite number of images is formed.Now, you would notice that the images keep becoming smaller and smaller. At a certain image, due to the inaccurate position of the mirrors(it is impossible to place them exactly parallel to each other in practice), the small image will be distorted and not detected by the eye.Another factor is that real mirrors are not actually perfect reflectors... With each reflection, a bit of light is lost, so the reflected object becomes dimmer and dimmer until it can no longer be seen.
No. I don't honestly know why just that it doesn't because my teacher said so but she could be wrong. Some teachers can be pretty stupid. Yes of course. Don't spew nonsense. It's a LAW. All you have to do to prove this point, is to draw a semi-major axis, aka tangent to any point on the curved surface, draw the normal, then reflect the incoming ray. If you do this for parallel rays coming onto the curved surface, you'll realize that the reflected rays converge at one point, the focal point, because the curved mirror acts as a lens as well.
What you could do is, get 3 similar concave and convex mirrors and then place them separately. Now get 3 similar objects, like a human figure toy, and place each in front of the mirror with different settings, i.e., one at focal point, one beyond focal point and one between focal point n mirror. Each forms a different image in the mirror. You could put up a ray diagram for each setting behind it to explain why such an image is formed. Hope this helps!
They communicate with each other by sharing their ideas and maybe talk about their experiments together or writing to each other
They are different by the way they are made up. They are each composed of different isomers. Cellulose is exclusively a plant product. Glycogen is nicknamed "animal starch" and is found in the liver and in muscle tissue. Plants produce starch from mono saccharides as a result of photosynthesis.
Enantiomers are molecules that are mirror images of each other. Also known as optical isomers. The two forms are different in the way that left- and right-hand gloves are different.
In Chemistry, an enantiomer are mirror images of each other. An optically active isometer has equal parts for the enantiometer. An isomer are compounds that are structured differently but have the same molecular formula.
No, they are not.
Structural Isomers- differ in the covalent arrangement of their atoms Geometric Isomers- differ in spatial arrangement around double bonds Enantiomers- mirror images of each other
South America and Africa are considered mirror images of each other due to their similar shapes and positions. This resemblance is due to the theory of plate tectonics and the separation of the two continents from the supercontinent Pangaea.
equilateral triangle
Bilateral Symmetry
are cyclohenane and n-hexane isomers of each other?explain
africa and north america
I think its bilateral
You're talking about a line of symmetry. But if the sections aremirror images of each other, then they're not congruent.
yes ma'am