<p>I think I remember putting copper + water for one answer.</p>
<p>Not that it’s helpful for anything, haha. Anyone remember that one specifically?</p>
<p>I think I remember putting copper + water for one answer.</p>
<p>Not that it’s helpful for anything, haha. Anyone remember that one specifically?</p>
<p>i think it was 35 as it was between 30 and 40 and asking something about above crude oil i believe…</p>
<p>I put aluminum and water???</p>
<p>i also put copper and water</p>
<p>I remember putting copper and water, forgot what the question asked, though.</p>
<p>What was the answer for #40?</p>
<p>Copper and water was talking about which one of these materials and liquids would give the lowest temperature change; inherently, copper and water have the lowest respective temperature change so they were the answer I think. </p>
<p>And the one about 30, 35, 40, 45 was 35 I believe. All of the materials and solutions began at a tempature of 25 degrees and the temperature change corresponding to what the question was asking was 10 degrees so 10+25=35</p>
<p>i remember one of the answer was .14 am i right? because they said p^2 and i took a figure .4 and squared it</p>
<p>@randomguy2</p>
<p>What’s your reasoning behind that? You may be right, I just don’t remember the question and the answer choices.</p>
<p>.4^2 is not equal to .14 if that’s what you’re implying</p>
<p>It was. 16</p>
<p>omg…bahahahah .4^2 isnt .14 its .16 my bad but the question was about the alleles of who can taste and cant taste. It was like who cant taste blah blah and the answeres were like a)14 b).14 c).014 <---- something along the line of this</p>
<p>Did anyone get p=q for the most amount of heterozygous?</p>
<p>And did anyone remember a question that involved the calculation of sqrt0.04 = 0.2 in the allele passage?</p>
<p>yep I got p=q</p>
<p>also, what’d you get for the reason that a magnetic stirrer was used? Out of all the choices, I thought “distributing the heat evenly” made the most sense…</p>
<p>Yes i go that one too iceblender.</p>
<p>i said it’s so the dense objects go down, how does it distribute heat evenly?</p>
<p>what question are you talking about</p>
<p>What was the purpose of stirring the liquid?</p>
<p>wait there were objects in that one???</p>
<p>I thought that was an experiment only with a liquid placed inside a container and they measure the conductivity or whatever it was. </p>
<p>I’m only 50% sure about this one. </p>
<p>But yeah I put to distribute heat evenly because I didn’t think any of the answer choices looked right</p>
<p>Copper and water was right and 35(%) is a number I remember as right</p>
<p>harsh curve or better curve for this test?</p>