Official SAT Subject Test - Chemistry - June 2015

Do you guys think a raw score of 60 could equate 700?

Was there an option for a postive/negative 555 for a certain question or was there just one? And what did the question ask for again? I remember bubbling in positive, but I’m not sure…

@YoohooAddict if the curve is generous, yes. According to the College Board book, a 61 is a 700 but a 60 is a 690.

i might cancel my scores to retake in october

i really need this 800 and i think i got raw of 79

@xexvc0302 Same… I don’t think 79 is gonna be an 800 tho :confused:

temperature is a reflection of the average KENETIC ENERGY

Like for real why are ya’ll complaining about getting a 790 and not an 800 when others got lower? Be appreciative of what you got. Like colleges won’t distinguish you from others due to you getting a 790 and not an 800l

temperature does not reflect total energy though, it said total energy, not kinetic

Ohyeah for the temperature calculations one, was it deviation from ideal gas behavior?

ideal gas behavior is a function of temperature. High temp, low pressure, brownian motion

Yeah but it asked about whether you’d be able to calculate it from that… Technically all of them were correct answers, then, since you can calculate temperature from density (because you can calculate moles and volume and differences).

The question is stupid in my opinion.

Ugh I think I’ll get a 790 :confused: And yes, I get that others have it worse, but can I not set personal goals for myself? I want an 800 because I want an 800.

ideal gas behavior can mean ideal gas law

best case scenario i get 800. Worst case I get below 790

@topaz1116 Can you make a raw score conversion table from an 800 up to a 600?

conversion tables are on the internet. you can look them up easily.

does anyone remember the question number for the heat of formation

@xexvc0302 yeah. I mean technically for non-ideal behavior, you could experimentally measure the value of R, but it’s not feasible… And technically, all of the possibilities were possible.

@YoohooAddict you mean the one from the College Board book? I’m think this curve will be one or two points more lenient, but I can’t predict the actual curve any more than you can.