Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is the time at the Prime Meridian, which is 0 degrees longitude. Tokyo, located at 140 degrees east, is 9 hours ahead of GMT. Therefore, when it is 12 noon on Monday at Greenwich, it would be 9:00 PM on Monday in Tokyo.
To solve for minimum pressure problems in chemistry, you can use the ideal gas law equation, PV = nRT. Rearrange the equation to solve for P (pressure) when given V (volume), n (number of moles), R (gas constant), and T (temperature in Kelvin). Plugin the values and calculate the minimum pressure required.
You would solve for M1, which represents the molarity of the stock solution. The equation M1V1 = M2V2 is used to calculate the molarity of a stock solution when you know the volume and molarity of a more diluted solution.
Ballhawk it is a vocabulary word on the same page that you got this question from
Used the equation Density=Mass/Volume to solve this one.
The isoelectric point (pI) is the pH at which a molecule has no net charge. To find pI from the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, set the net charge of the molecule equal to zero and solve for pH. This equation is derived by considering the acidic and basic dissociation constants of the molecule to calculate the pH at which the net charge is zero.
The quadratic formula can be used to solve an equation only if the highest degree in the equation is 2.
2.
Two.
2
It's quite convenient, for it offers a general method to solve any equation that involves a polynomial of degree two (in one variable).
Sure. You can always 'solve for' a variable, and if it happens to be the only variable in the equation, than that's how you solve the equation.
you don't answer an equation, you solve an equation
solve it
If you solve such an equation for "y", you get an equation in the slope-intercept form.
It is not an equation if it does not have an equals sign. You could simplify it but not solve it.
you can only solve for one in an equation so it can equal something
How do you use division to solve a multiplication equation?Answer this question…