<p>@Future, I was thinking of putting 2 but I don’t think the labels on the x or y axis matched up to figure 1 but it did for 2.</p>
<p>@redkeyboard: the problem is the ACT test makers don’t have room to make errors so I doubt it was a mistake on their part…but all of the numbers they gave fit the other table…btw I put 4 as well.</p>
<p>I put 2 cause x on graph 1 was 4 in the spot it referred to, so x half is 2? Idk if that logic is correct tho. Man last passage was SO hard</p>
<p>@Joeykrug I had the same logic as you did. x was 4 at the particular location and it asked for xhalf, so it had to be 2. It was either a typo, or the answer’s 2… I think.</p>
<p>Had to guess on about 5 sadly but the ones I were able to get to, I know I got right.</p>
<p>WHAT about the question regarding a graph, asking if the concentration of something (maybe SO4) was always above 0. i think that was the answer</p>
<p>^Wasn’t that graph always on 0, that was the one that hugged the y-axis.</p>
<p>Argh!! I despise the science test or ACT! It is EXTREMELY flawed in reflecting your science knowledge. The last 2 passages about the 2 scientists and the gamma rays were so hard! I had to guess on like 8</p>
<p>Has anyone made a list of consolidated answers?</p>
<p>Do you guys agree that this science test was harder than the ones in the Red Book?</p>
<p>So is it likely that this curve will be more lenient than April’s???</p>
<p>Anyone got any curve predictions? And if anyone has some awesome memory and happens to remember 36 37 and 38 thatd be cool too ^^. I hope this science doesn’t messup my score, last sci I got a 35 :(</p>
<p>The science section was so much harder than the practice tests I did. I had like a bunch questions left when time was called.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember what they put for the heat, gravitational potential energy, and kinetic energy question?</p>
<p>I predict the curve will be pretty lenient. The test writers made a typo, so that question might get thrown out. And even if they do, it might still be (-2) = 36.</p>
<p>@miaage: e gravity is changed into e heat and e kinetic?
Physics…blegh :P</p>
<p>I put Potential = Kinetic and Heat, because potential decreases as it falls and there is friction generating heat because of the upward force</p>
<p>What do you think the curve will be?</p>
<p>Definitely Potential=kinetic + heat. I can thank physics for that one.</p>
<p>Yeah that’s BS, I took Chem this past year and am taking Physics next so I was straight out of luck. Wasn’t even in the passage. But I guessed and got it, so whatever.</p>
<p>There better be a nice curve on this test…</p>