Generally, an acidic salt and water will form, but not always. I must assume you mean equimolar and not equal amounts, for it is very difficult to tell if you have not stated specific acids/bases.
'Stoichiometric' means equal amounts according to the balanced reaction. So at that point you have only water where H+ and OH- conc.'s are equal (1.0*10-7)
The pH value will be reduced to nearly 1 with the effect of neutralisation and the end products of salt and water.
In pigments: Equal amounts of red and blue are used to make purple. Mixing equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow (the three primary colors) will yield brown. In light: Equal amounts of red and blue make magenta (a lighter, more reddish shade of purple). Equal amounts of magenta and yellow make white.
Yes, it is correct.
You get secondary colors.
'Stoichiometric' means equal amounts according to the balanced reaction. So at that point you have only water where H+ and OH- conc.'s are equal (1.0*10-7)
Equal amonts. KOH + HCl -> KCl + H2O As usual, a solt and water is produced if ~ neutral pH.
None of those numbers can ever equal 24, but there may be some method or processof combining them, with some assortment of arithmetic operations, that might produce24 as the result.
The pH value will be reduced to nearly 1 with the effect of neutralisation and the end products of salt and water.
If by pH you mean the acidity of a compound then by combining equal amounts of each pH they would all "cancel each other out" i.e. neutralise which leaves a pH of 7
First of all, the primary colors are namely, Red, Green, Blue, Yellow and etc. when mixed in equal amounts, they result in different colors, and it would only depend on what primary colors you would mix.
An Equation is a number sentence stating that two amounts are equal
The two amounts were equal. In the eyes of the law both claims were determined to be equal. She mixed equal amounts of rice and water.
Blue. The ratio of red to blue will effect the final outcome. Equal amounts of each will result in a true purple.
factor
Angles combining to equal 90 degrees are known as complementary angles.
In pigments: Equal amounts of red and blue are used to make purple. Mixing equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow (the three primary colors) will yield brown. In light: Equal amounts of red and blue make magenta (a lighter, more reddish shade of purple). Equal amounts of magenta and yellow make white.