Want this question answered?
no
Yes, the reaction distances increases with speed while reaction time stays the same. for example the two-second rule.
true
After a chemical reaction the reactants are transformed in products.
Not unless it is a reversible reaction (Such as the Haber Process). If it is not reversible, you cannot get the same substances back.
Yes. The base engine componants are the same. The differences are the intake and fuel delivery.
the two are not the same ones an acid and ones a sodium. so it will make a acid base reaction
The first reactant and last product are the same.
A chemical reaction changes the actual chemical make-up of a molecule while a physical reaction only changed the physical state of a molecule, the atomic make-up in the molecule stays the same. (ex: H20(l) ---heat--> H20(g))
no
Raw egg is a hetrogenous mixture, you can see this when you crack an egg, it clearly has 2 componants and you will not observe the same uniform composition if you take several random samples.
The simple reaction is: 2Na + S----------Na2S (in same conditions: ammonia solution or tetrahydrofuran)
Raw egg is a hetrogenous mixture, you can see this when you crack an egg, it clearly has 2 componants and you will not observe the same uniform composition if you take several random samples.
it would be the same
To construct an equation for a chemical reaction, put the reactants on the left, and the products on the right, and make sure that the number of atoms of each element is the same on each side.
Yes, the reaction distances increases with speed while reaction time stays the same. for example the two-second rule.
the autoimmune reaction is the reaction between the antibody and antigene when both come from the same body but the isoimmune reaction is between the antigene and antibody produced for the same antigene ( the same according to the type but not the immunity )