<p>Lol, in that case was the choice just “increase”?</p>
<p>I honestly don’t remember. I definitely know the answer I chose had increase in it
Lol I wish more people remembered it</p>
<p>You’re right Wong. I only remembered that the answer was D, and that it was question 23, not necessarily what I put for the answer (although I know that D was the correct answer). </p>
<p>Requiem, do you remember what the question asked then? This was the only one I remember that referred to the color of light. (Of course, with all of the science questions there are, there’s nothing in particular that stands out as “increase” as the answer, although it is entirely possible to have been the answer to one.)</p>
<p>They asked what would happen to concentration as exposure increased (for the color blue)</p>
<p>Do you know if one of the possible answer choices involved o3?</p>
<p>^No the answer to that question was not that the green food coloring did not react with the O3 (ozone), but that the green food coloring was a mix of the blue and yellow. Since its absorbency was clearly an average of the 2.</p>
<p>Ugh lol. I give up on this question.</p>
<p><em>possible answer choices</em></p>
<p>I know that O3 wasn’t the correct answer, I just remember that it was the first answer choice (and that I re-read the first paragraph to rule that answer out) and was hoping to see if that was the question you were thinking of.</p>
<p>I’m with Requiem on this one; plus it sounds like you wouldn’t get a question wrong with an answer as simply as “increase”, since those are generally the easier questions.</p>
<p>^wait are you referring to the one that was increase, then decrease (at least as a possible choice?)</p>
<p>^i’m not sure what the hell we are referring to anymore.</p>
<p>Wasn’t there a question like, what can you tell from the given lab info or whatever and one of the choices, I think B, was Blue and Yellow make Green Solution because the 2 previous graphs proved that they combined together to make the 3rd graph (green solution)?</p>
<p>^Yes…that was the blue and yellow make green one.</p>
<p>k great, thanks WongTongx2.</p>
<p>I think it would be WongTong*Tong Because you would have 2WongTong or Wong2Tong (my personal favorite) or even WongTong2…which implies that there was a wongtong before him…</p>
<p>“He didnt want to get the same frog again so he tagged them because doing so would skew the distribution toward that of that frogs.”</p>
<p>how did you read this answer from the frog experiment? Is it saying getting the same frog would skew the distribution toward that frog, or tagging them would skew the distribution toward that of that frog’s? </p>
<p>I read the second way so I chose the SIMILAR anwer that said tagging them would “skew the distribution away” from that frog. I think it’s the only question I missed on science, but anyway, goodbyeeee 36.</p>
<p>Wong. you’re thinking about the one with plots on a graph. the trend of the graph is increase decrease. There was also an answer that’s “increase”, but that’s not the one we’re talking about.</p>
<p>It said something like - it asked like what is the relationship between exposure and absorbance. like choices were something like…</p>
<p>A. Exposure increases, absorbance increases
B. Exposure increases, absorbance decreases
C. Exposure increases, absorbance varies
D. Exposure varies, absorbance increases</p>
<p>^ yea I made up the last 2 choices but it was definitely either A or B</p>
<p>It was increase/decrease right?</p>
<p>It was the relationship between time and concentration, not time and absorbance; however, both the answer would be the same for both. I put B on that one, as time (exposure) increases, concentration decreases.</p>
<p>Idk. For that question I put increase/increase.</p>
<p>dacrzazn93, i thought the question was concentration vs absorbance, not exposure? i think i put as absorbance increases, concentration decreases</p>