<p>Remember putting 10 and 10 for some random bird question early?</p>
<p>the 20 hz was choice B (G)</p>
<p>what was the answer to the force of attraction question?</p>
<p>i think it was something like two positive charges will repel each other.</p>
<p>That’s what I put too, chair2.</p>
<p>@chair</p>
<p>There were 2 choices with them repelling each other. Was it the one with protons?</p>
<p>yeah but one choice was negative and one was positive</p>
<p>@mabsjen
I said it was protons repelling each other. Here were the choices along the lines:
A. Because the protons are positively charged and like charges repel each other.
B. Because the protons are positively charged and like charges attract each other.
C. Because the electrons are negatively charged and like charges repel each other.
D. Because the electrons are negatively charged and like charges attract each other.</p>
<p>You can automatically eliminate B and D based on common sense. I chose protons because the passage mentioned the hydrogen bonding with lot of strongly charged protons or something like that</p>
<p>so what was the exact answer choice?</p>
<p>i think it’s A because it was talking about within an atom, and remember the electrons surround an atom</p>
<p>It’s A, the information provided specifically mentioned protons, said nothing about electrons.</p>
<p>i think you have the order mixed up</p>
<p>A. Because the protons are positively charged and like charges attract each other.
B. Because the protons are positively charged and like charges repel each other.
C. Because the electrons are negatively charged and like charges attract each other.
D. Because the electrons are negatively charged and like charges repel each other.</p>
<p>whatever the order is, the right answer is “Because the protons are positively charged and like charges repel each other.”</p>
<p>so far, here are some answers:
9.9 less seeds but large seeds
study A had more of 1 type of bird
green at 1 = neutral
NaOH asetic acid
not remeasure them (beaks)
6L is 1/2 a much as 3L for O2
500-1000
i said the first 2 elements were significant and the 2nd elements were decreased during july
i said it was like 29.3 b/c it went with the trend
site didnt change in study 1
wat was the difference between the two bird studies… i cant remember
protons because like repel</p>
<p>The dif between the two bird studies was one of the studies studied this one bird(forget the name) while the other did not. The first study did 2 kinds of birds but the second study was on island B where there was only 1 kind of bird. Idk the correct phrasing of the answer, but I believe it was A.</p>
<p>oh ya, now i remember… yep</p>
<p>can someone explain the questions to these following answers</p>
<p>“i said the first 2 elements were significant and the 2nd elements were decreased during july”</p>
<p>“site didnt change in study 1”</p>
<p>an answer for some question about the birds was “site” i think it what variable did not change</p>
<p>the elements with the precipitation, the first 2 were like cu and no4 or something… i cant remember and the 2nd two were cl and so4 i think? there was a question with like the highest and lowest points have something in common. i just remember the answer</p>
<p>ugh this section killled me… i had 10+ questions left, 2 whole sections that i bubbled in random letters. it wasnt even hard but w/science i really need time to read & think :(</p>
<p>^^^^ That’s what I did the first time. The trick is to read the questions and look at the studies that it mentions. If the question doesn’t mention it, quickly find a graph with the info it’s looking for.</p>
<p>Just to end it, water was farther to the end (which means greater intensity)
I remember that much</p>
<p>What was the answer to “How would the wet deposition levels of (insert all the elements here) be affected if there was a month with no precipitation?” I said there would be no wet deposition level, because the definition of wet deposition had to do with it specifically came from precip… and the level of the two elements was only there because of road salt or something</p>