Water.
Fevers would run higher if liquid water's specific heat were lower. The amount of energy need to raise our body temperature would be less. Although the body would still develop control mechanisms to regulate the temperature to prevent heat death of the cells.
Sorry, since it is unknown of what experiment or laboratory analysis you're talking about, this question is unanswerable. It also is not accurate enough: FeNCS is not a good formula, SCN is an anion: SCN- and the sentence:".... when the calibration curve was prepared(??) would this raise or lower the value of Keq" is difficult to interprete as such a curve is not adequately described.
The patient has excessive acid in the body fluids. You would treat the patient with a chemical that would raise the pH (lower pH=more acidic, so you need to raise the pH because higher pH=more basic)
If you were to travel to Denver, the mile high city, air pressure is reduced. This makes it easier for gas molecules to escape the liquid, hence the boiling point lowers. On the other hand, when pressure increases, gases have a harder time escaping the liquid so the boiling point must increase.
The basic principle of the syphon system is that the difference of pressure at both the ends of the tube would drive the liquid from the level of higher pressure to that of lower pressure. If, suppose, the level of liquid becomes the same in both the container then flow of liquid would stop. So, if you want to send back the liquid, then you have raise the container above the first one, then liquid would start flow from the second to the first.
One with a high heat capacity
There are usually two ways to lower a basketball net. Either there will be a lever on the back, and you would scroll that around to raise or lower, or there is a lever, and you pull it down to raise the net and push it up to lower the net.
If you're talking about "lower" as the comparative of the adjective low (low, lower, lowest) the opposite would be "higher". If however you mean the verb "to lower" an adequate opposite to use would be "to raise".
the allow you to have the power to raise your cholesterol level up when you want. why would you want to raise it you say? to lower it, of course! the allow you to have the power to raise your cholesterol level up when you want. why would you want to raise it you say? to lower it, of course!
Fevers would run higher if liquid water's specific heat were lower. The amount of energy need to raise our body temperature would be less. Although the body would still develop control mechanisms to regulate the temperature to prevent heat death of the cells.
Ammonia, which is basic, would raise pH. Vinegar, coffee and lemon juice are all acidic and would cause pH to be lower.
It was difficult because the floods would wash away any young plants
there is no pressure to raise or lower wages.
Sounds like a grenaded transmission
Sorry, since it is unknown of what experiment or laboratory analysis you're talking about, this question is unanswerable. It also is not accurate enough: FeNCS is not a good formula, SCN is an anion: SCN- and the sentence:".... when the calibration curve was prepared(??) would this raise or lower the value of Keq" is difficult to interprete as such a curve is not adequately described.
Yes, an object with a lower density than liquid mercury (13.6 g/cm³) would float on it. This is because objects float when they displace an amount of liquid with a weight equal to or greater than their own weight. Since the density of the object is lower than that of the liquid mercury, it will float.
Sand is pretty inert, so it should have very little effect. However, if some of the sand does dissolve in the liquid, it would raise the boiling point of the liquid.