5 examples of gases found in the normal home environment include; oxygen (air), nitrogen (most abundant element found in the air), carbon dioxide (air and the bubbles in fizzy drinks), argon in air and finally, methane if there is a gas supply, or propane or butane in fuel gas bottles.
Carbon monoxide and SO2. are present in polluted air. You might have helium in a balloon.
give 2example of melting
Square root of 2, cube root of 5 are two examples.
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the grape is delicious
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Fluids are materials that have no fixed shape and are free to flow, such as gases. Gases are also fluids.Here are some examples of fluids:WaterBloodAirGasHydrogenHeliumOxygen etc...
it is the utilization of human and physical resources
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When you remove limescale all i got soz.
Your food, digestive system, liquids,solids, and gases are all found in the liver and your welcome for the answer.:)
Metals such as copper, silver, and gold. Salt solutions like NaCl (sodium chloride) dissolved in water. Graphite, a form of carbon found in pencils. Wet solutions containing ions, like acid solutions. Some gases like ionized gases in neon lights.
Carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, iron, copper.
The five gases commonly found in a fridge are refrigerant gas (such as R-134a or R-600a), nitrogen (used for pressure), carbon dioxide (found in some systems for cooling and as a refrigerant), oxygen (present in air in small amounts), and trace amounts of moisture.
whatis the 5 examples of adverb
5 examples of qualitative
No - there are many gases that contain more than one or two atoms. Some examples are: Carbon Dioxide: 3 atoms Acetylene: 4 atoms Methane: 5 atoms Ethylene: 6 atoms . . . and the list goes on. It is true though that as the more atoms a molecule consists of, the less likely it is to be a gas at a temperature we are familiar with. Pretty nearly all molecules can be gases if the pressure is low enough and the temperature is high enough (unless they decompose before they can be heated enough to make their vapor pressure exceed the ambient pressure).
Examples: oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen (gases), carbon, phosphorus (nonmetals).