No. Magnesium methoxide will react with water to form a gel. The gel is actually a cross-linked Magnesium hydroxide structure in methanol. Magnesium methoxide is typically sold/stored in dry methanol to protect the chemical as it is incredibly hygroscopic.
Yes.
The dot and cross diagram, or Lewis structure, for hydrogen bromide is as follows: Place a Br atom in the center and single bond it to one H atom. The Br atom then has 3 lone pairs placed around it.
H x dot C ::: C dot x HWhere dot represents carbon electrons and x represents hydrogen electrons.
Methanol does not react with water.
Methanol is a flammable liquid and falls in hazard class 3.
cross: torque dot: work
The dot of an 'i' is called a tittle and the cross of a 't' is called a T-bar.
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No. Magnesium methoxide will react with water to form a gel. The gel is actually a cross-linked Magnesium hydroxide structure in methanol. Magnesium methoxide is typically sold/stored in dry methanol to protect the chemical as it is incredibly hygroscopic.
no
Yes.
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probably a big, jumping dot of wool...
Because in dot product we take projection fashion and that is why we used cos and similar in cross product we used sin
methanol is liquid
The dot-product and cross-product are used in high order physics and math when dealing with matrices or, for example, the properties of an electron (spin, orbit, etc.).