<p>yup young unknown is right!</p>
<p>when you increase the temperature, did both pressure increase?</p>
<p>the only one i was unsure was the squares having a 3by4 rectangle taken out, asking which was the greatest? what is the answer</p>
<p>@PotatoMan - Yup, when the lab temp went from 20-something to 30 degrees.</p>
<p>@36onmath - I put A.</p>
<p>yeah. i checked that with a chem thing where the principle is ‘p/t = p/t’. </p>
<p>so it’s a direct relationshipp</p>
<p>YES POTATO MAN! (im really upset now bc of how poorly i did on english by missing 1 pt
)</p>
<p>was #1 on science just variation but not general trend? They mostly flattened out and then curved down a bit, but some of them dipped back up…</p>
<p>The greatest one A for the square problem.</p>
<p>@36onmath, the perimeter was the largest in the one where the part taken out was the steepest. i think it was A</p>
<p>36onmath: in post 241 your logic seems kinda off… But thanks for clarifying the x^2 + M question.</p>
<p>@JD I’m pretty sure they all decreased</p>
<p>it just increased! jd989898</p>
<p>It was all decrease.</p>
<p>Sent from my PC36100 using CC App</p>
<p>wow i actually missed one problem on the math, im so ****ed
will it still be a 36?</p>
<p>Yea maybe they increased I don’t remember if it went up or down. It definitely was increase or decrease tho, not “no general trend”</p>
<p>No it was decreased. A very slight decrease.</p>
<p>or it was all decrease! i cant remember which way the graph went i just remember it was only one way</p>
<p>Dude, you aren’t f***ed by missing one question. Even if you get a 35, if you got at least two 36s you’ll still have a 36 composite. Chill out, haha</p>
<p>is there ANY WAY to get your scores back like NOW???</p>