<p>Are you sure it was aluminum to aluminum hydroxide? I was pretty sure it was H2O to something…</p>
<p>no its aluminum to aluminum hydroxide. 100% sure</p>
<p>agree with sport</p>
<p>I put AL to H20 :S</p>
<p>Yeah it’s aluminum to aluminum hydroxide. It was in the balanced equation</p>
<p>OMG!!! LOL people kept telling me to just find the answers from the CHARTS and i totally ignored the formula,which is just incredible… wow</p>
<p>@zenyth
I said over 126</p>
<p>Question from earlier that never got answered:</p>
<p>For the question where it asked what Scientist 2 would determine the 76 year comet to be, did you guys say “short-term” or whatever the word was (b/c Scientist 2 said something like under 200 yrs.)?</p>
<p>yes short term not from kb was the answer</p>
<p>Hi what did you guys get for the problems when it says what the total octane would be? I put 90-125</p>
<p>did anyone say larger comets would be from 20-30 in diameter??</p>
<p>no those were the normal sized… larger…was 30+</p>
<p>david are you having a problem?</p>
<p>no it said the larger small comets would be wat size…</p>
<p>since it was 10-30</p>
<p>the larger size “smaller comets” would be from 20-30</p>
<p>what did you guys say was the weight on each of the scales? I said 2.5 each…but it may have been 5 each…</p>
<p>right so the much larger would be 30+ which is what the question was and I got 5 for the scales</p>
<p>-For the amount of H2 produced within day 3 and 4 for did you guys put 56? I subtracted day 3’s total from day 4’s total.</p>
<p>Also…
-Yes Aluminum to Aluminum Hydroxide
-Yay for conduction
-L4 was the control, all the others had alleles added into them
-I chose less than 10 in diameter because I thought it mentioned it a little after?</p>
<p>no im pretty sure it was asking wat the size of the larger comets of the small category was</p>
<p>therefore it could not be greater than 30 since the range of small comets was from 20-30</p>
<p>No, it was 30+. The scientists declared that unusually large comets had not been found, thus 30+.</p>
<p>What about when the scales were placed upside-down on each other? How did that look?</p>