1) they are two different materials or 2) the solids are different size or 3) the solids have different densities.
This is an unidentified part of Pakistan, about 60 miles south of Lahore
At 20 degrees Celsius, the most soluble salt is sodium chloride (NaCl). This is because sodium chloride has a high solubility in water due to its ionic nature, which allows it to easily dissociate into its ions in solution. Other salts may have different solubilities at this temperature based on their chemical structure and interactions with water molecules.
Different liquids have different freezing points. For water, it's 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 0 degrees Celsius.
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No, not all metals melt at 1064 degrees Celsius. Different metals have different melting points based on their atomic structure and bonding. For example, copper melts at 1084 degrees Celsius, while aluminum melts at 660 degrees Celsius.
This is an unidentified part of Pakistan, about 60 miles south of Lahore
Because opposite angles are 90 degrees.
15g of the compound will dissolve in 100g of water at 0 degrees C. If two unidentified solids of the same texture and color have different solubilities in 100 grams of water at 20 degrees C, you could conclude that they are different substances.
They total 180 degrees, because they comprise half the total of the inside angles
they have different degreeses because a different degrees is what make different types of shape
At 20 degrees Celsius, the most soluble salt is sodium chloride (NaCl). This is because sodium chloride has a high solubility in water due to its ionic nature, which allows it to easily dissociate into its ions in solution. Other salts may have different solubilities at this temperature based on their chemical structure and interactions with water molecules.
10 degrees
It depends on the level of the students. School students should conclude that this statement is true. Higher level students should be able to conclude that the statement is only true in plane geometry. On a curved surface it is not true. On convex surfaces (bulging out), the angles add to more than 180 degrees, on concave surfaces (bulge in) they add to less than 180 degrees. Graduate students should conclude that the statement is equivalent to Euclid's parallel postulate and so conclude that, if the statement is not always true, that demonstrates the existence of consistent non-Euclidean geometries.
The different temperature between these temperatures is 4 degrees, as 15 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 59 degrees Fahrenheit, 475 degrees Kelvin, and 519 degrees Rankine.
The answer depends on the temperature scale that you are using. Also, different people have different tolerances.
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32 degrees Fahrenheit represents a different temperature than 15 degrees Celsius. 15 degrees Celsius is equal to 59 degrees Fahrenheit.