turn 0 C to 273 K , 30 C to 303K then 255*85/303=101.3*V/273 V=193mL
1 mol N2 = 28g 30C = 303K At STP, 1mol * 273K is proportional 24L * 760torr. (PV = nRT) Then we do a little bit of stoichiometry... 10g * 1mol/28g * 24L*760torr/(1mol*273K) * 303K * xL/750torr = 9.6402 L 10.0g of N2 at 30C and 750torr should occupy 9.6402L
Mercury -39C Gallium 30C
Whether or not the density changes if some of the liquid evaporates between the time the liquid is delivered to the beaker and the time it is measured depends on the liquid. For almost all liquids, the answer is no because there was not enough time. Water will have a density of approximately 1 and if a small amount evaporates, it will still have the same density. If you had the beaker at 100C and the room at 0C and waited until the water was 4C, it would make a difference. If the water was at 40C and the room was at 30C, it would almost make no difference. A very few substances would undergo tremendous cooling. That would bring a corresponding increase in density.
Symphytum Q 5 drops twice in a day along with Baryta Carb 30C Increases the height to some extent. Najeeb.
the temperature is mainly tropical, in summer the temperature is upto 30C in most areas while in autumn and spring it is from 10- 20 C.
It is the same overall volume, but a different shape. A 30C will have a narrower chest that protrudes more, while a 34A has a broader chest and protrudes less. When you move down a band size, you move up a cup size to maintain the same overall volume. 34A = 32B = 30C.
A) more than 30c B) at or about 30c C) less than 30c The correct answer is A) more than 30c
Elemental sulphur is a solid at 30c
-30c
Try it, 30c would be a good asking price.
90a
2 but you would have 30c left
A dollar is 100c and so there are three 30c in it with a remainder of 10c
30C
30 Celsius is hotter than 30 Fahrenheit. 30F is equal to -1C. 30C is equal to 86F.
-40c is colder.
app. 20-30C