Description
1 what substance has the strongest (london) dispersion forces
Br2
l2
F2
Cl 2
2 which substance would have the highest melting point based on electronegativity
H2 Se
H2O
H2Te
H2S
3 hydrogen bonds can be found between molecules of which of the following substances
H2
NH3
Hl
CH4
4 which of the following intermolecular forces is responsible for iodine being a solid at room temperature
dipole-dipole forces
ion-dipole forces
dispersion forces
hydrogen bonds
User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following Studypool's honor code & terms of service.
Explanation & Answer
Review
Review
Anonymous
Just the thing I needed, saved me a lot of time.
Studypool
4.7
Trustpilot
4.5
Sitejabber
4.4
24/7 Homework Help
Stuck on a homework question? Our verified tutors can answer all questions, from basic math to advanced rocket science!
Most Popular Content
University of Akron Teaching Climate Change Discussion
I want to tell you that for this project you are supposed to do the following:1. Find 1 article promoting literacy in scie ...
University of Akron Teaching Climate Change Discussion
I want to tell you that for this project you are supposed to do the following:1. Find 1 article promoting literacy in science2. Choose a topic that you plan to teach your future students (like space or plants or types of rocks)3. Find 4 fiction and nonfiction texts that you can use to teach your topic to your students4. Evaluate the books, summarize them, and choose strategies to use to teach with the texts.5. see the guideline for the project.6. see the file from model 1 to 5 for the strategy you will choose.7.see the Rubric for the grade 8- https://www.nsta.org/outstanding-science-trade-books-students-k-1this link for the book you can choose from it
7 pages
Report. Lab. Spectroscopy
The light that we see from the sun or from a typical lightbulb is "white" light, meaning that is consists of an essentiall ...
Report. Lab. Spectroscopy
The light that we see from the sun or from a typical lightbulb is "white" light, meaning that is consists of an essentially continuous distribution of ...
PHY 121 College of DuPage Motion, Energy & Momentum Portfolio Project
Portfolio 2 - Motion, Energy & Momentum Due Thursday April 1 @ 11:59 pmundefinedOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsOo ...
PHY 121 College of DuPage Motion, Energy & Momentum Portfolio Project
Portfolio 2 - Motion, Energy & Momentum Due Thursday April 1 @ 11:59 pmundefinedOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsIn the kinematics skills sections I wrote the following phrase "using chart". My bad - Professor A's videos don't use charts! I apologize that this definitely would have been confusing. What I mean by chart is the following:List all the givensList all the assumptionsList all the variables that are zeroExample Problem With "chart":A cannon shoots a cannonball with an initial speed of 8 m/s at an angle of 20 degrees to the horizontal. What is the landing position of the cannonball?x-directionvi = 8m/s*cosine (20)vf = 8 m/s*cosine (20)a = 0 m/s/sdelta-x = ?y-directionvi = 8m/s*sin(20)vf = -8m/s*sin(20)a = -9.8 m/s/sdelta-y = 0 mQuick OverviewQuick OverviewThe portfolio project is where you get to show off what you can do with physics. So far we've learned Forces & Vectors, Motion, Energy and Momentum so that's the focus of this portfolio.At home, you'll set up scenarios (details in instructions). You'll measure everything you can about those scenarios and use those measurements to do calculations and show off your physics skills. A scorecard gives you a list of measurements, calculations and skills that you can choose from. Finally, you'll present all those measurements, calculations and skills in a presentation. This can be a video, a powerpoint, a word document, a sway, a webpage, a padlet...you get to choose your favorite platform.The portfolio is worth 250 points and is due on Thursday, April 1 at 11:59 pm.Portfolio InstructionsPortfolio InstructionsAttached Files: PHY121 Portfolio 2 Scorecard Sp21.docx PHY121 Portfolio 2 Scorecard Sp21.docx - Alternative Formats (19.984 KB) PHY121 Portfolio 2 Instructions Sp21.docx PHY121 Portfolio 2 Instructions Sp21.docx - Alternative Formats (691.208 KB)Download and read this document (I put it in Word and PDF) for the details on the first portfolio. I've also edited it to make a blank scorecard for you to help you keep track of your score as you put your portfolio together. You'll be uploading your scorecard (with checkmarks where you think you've earned points) with your portfolio.Video examples of each scenarioVideo examples of each scenarioI built each scenario at my house and made these videos to show you samples in case the text instructions weren't good enough to help you see what you can do. Don't use my measurements/videos - you are expected to build your own at your home. Good luck! As always, let me know if you have questions.Here's a sample of the Ramp to Flat to Crash scenario:Next is the Table Dive:Finally is the Bounce:OPTIONAL: Using Pivot to Analyze Your Very Own VideosOPTIONAL: Using Pivot to Analyze Your Very Own VideosThe link to the Pivot Lab which you can use to analyze your videos is just below this item.Portfolio 2 Video Analysis (OPTIONAL)Portfolio 2 Video Analysis (OPTIONAL)Who and What Are You Allowed To Work With?Who and What Are You Allowed To Work With?You are expected to finish the portfolio by yourself. Do not do the scenarios with other people and do not share your own results. This is the equivalent of a take-home test where your work is your own.You are allowed to use all our notes and videos on Blackboard to help you as you go. You can also use the textbook and your old Connect work. Do not use other students in the class.If you are stuck, reach out to the professor, she is so happy to help!What if I need extra time?What if I need extra time?Portfolios are the equivalent of exams in the class, so late work is penalized. Portfolio 2 can be up to 1 week late and there is a 10 point per day penalty. If you turn it in after Thursday, April 8th at 11:59pm, your grade will be a zero.FAQ SectionFAQ SectionHello! Here's a helpful FAQ section for you! Right now it's based on questions from past sections but I will add new FAQs from you as needed. Check back here often :)1) I found coefficient of friction by doing the side experiment like in portfolio 1:You don't need to find coefficient of friction anymore, just so you know! There are other ways to figure it out. Please try NOT to use this.2) How should I organize this one?Follow our problem-solving method. First, read over the givens and make some measurements and the video of your setup. Second, draw diagrams, set up charts, Big Ugly equations or momentum equations. Third, show me your calculations and finally always circle your answers. Label the heck out of everything!3) How do I start?Check out our physics problem-solving strategy! It's really great for portfolio help. First explore your scenario and make measurements. Second, set up a diagram. Third, set up your equations that go with the diagram. Fourth, solve for everything you can from those equations. Fifth, maybe there's other things you can figure out (see the scorecard for things you haven't found yet and maybe you can figure out those, too!).4) Can I do all three scenarios? Or...do I have to do all three scenarios?Sure! You can do them all - solve for everything you can! If there's doubles, there's doubles - you get credit only once but think of it as insurance. If you've found that one scenario doesn't give you enough points, then for sure hop over and add the other ones in. 7) Can I get more than 250 points?YES! You can get up to 280 points.When You Turn Things In...When You Turn Things In...Turn in your project and turn in your Scorecard each time. This will help me grade it - if you tell me what points you are going for, then I know what to look for. Makes sense, right? Thanks!If you do a video or Padlet, please post a link to your video in YouTube or your Padlet along with your scorecard. Please do a new Padlet for each portfolio (but within one portfolio, you can do more than one scenario). Do not edit your padlets or videos after the due date! To be safe - don't even load up your Padlet after the due date until you see a grade for it in Blackboard. If you are making a Powerpoint, please use just black and white background - don't get fancy. Fancy = large filesize = may not upload = MONSTER AMOUNTS OF STRESS. Thanks!Upload your portfolio with plenty of time for possible technology glitches. I recommend finishing a day or two early just in case you can't get the files to upload and you need Professor's assistance!
Similar Content
Chemistry: how many molecules of nitrogen gas are in 22.4 L
6.022x10^236.022X10^246.022X10^256.022X10^22...
Magnetic Field and RMS Voltages Questions
Question: 3
Consider a point P at a distance R = 10.5 cm on the perpendicular bisector of a straight wire of length 35.0 c...
Microbiology Worksheet
...
GWU Global Patterns of Net Primary Production Discussion
Describe the global patterns of net primary production. In your summary make sure to address the following two questions:1...
RCC Microbiology Growth Typical of Bacteria Smooth & Paste Like Question
i have homework i did every thing Almost supply me see and do adjustments...
Albany Medical College Physical Significance & Electric Fields Physics Question
Please solve problems 5,6 and 7 take a look at the attached questions .....................
Ted Talk
In this attempt to build a human being through reading the genome, a simple concept of machine learning is used where on o...
Preventative Vs
Although doctors find pleasure in curing patients, it is never the wish of any person to contract an ailment. In cases whe...
Chemistry Quizzes
The scene shown below being a ruler, the quantitative measurement to be obtained by it is length Mass is referred to as qu...
Related Tags
Book Guides
Communist Manifesto
by Karl Marx
What Happened
by Hillary Clinton
The Good Earth
by Pearl S. Buck
East of Eden
by John Steinback
Rules Of Civility
by Amor Towles
The Call of the Wild
by Jack London
All Quiet on the Western Front
by Erich Maria Remarque
The Da Vinci Code
by Dan Brown
Heart of Darkness
by Joseph Conrad
Get 24/7
Homework help
Our tutors provide high quality explanations & answers.
Post question
Most Popular Content
University of Akron Teaching Climate Change Discussion
I want to tell you that for this project you are supposed to do the following:1. Find 1 article promoting literacy in scie ...
University of Akron Teaching Climate Change Discussion
I want to tell you that for this project you are supposed to do the following:1. Find 1 article promoting literacy in science2. Choose a topic that you plan to teach your future students (like space or plants or types of rocks)3. Find 4 fiction and nonfiction texts that you can use to teach your topic to your students4. Evaluate the books, summarize them, and choose strategies to use to teach with the texts.5. see the guideline for the project.6. see the file from model 1 to 5 for the strategy you will choose.7.see the Rubric for the grade 8- https://www.nsta.org/outstanding-science-trade-books-students-k-1this link for the book you can choose from it
7 pages
Report. Lab. Spectroscopy
The light that we see from the sun or from a typical lightbulb is "white" light, meaning that is consists of an essentiall ...
Report. Lab. Spectroscopy
The light that we see from the sun or from a typical lightbulb is "white" light, meaning that is consists of an essentially continuous distribution of ...
PHY 121 College of DuPage Motion, Energy & Momentum Portfolio Project
Portfolio 2 - Motion, Energy & Momentum Due Thursday April 1 @ 11:59 pmundefinedOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsOo ...
PHY 121 College of DuPage Motion, Energy & Momentum Portfolio Project
Portfolio 2 - Motion, Energy & Momentum Due Thursday April 1 @ 11:59 pmundefinedOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsOops! A note about the Kinematics SkillsIn the kinematics skills sections I wrote the following phrase "using chart". My bad - Professor A's videos don't use charts! I apologize that this definitely would have been confusing. What I mean by chart is the following:List all the givensList all the assumptionsList all the variables that are zeroExample Problem With "chart":A cannon shoots a cannonball with an initial speed of 8 m/s at an angle of 20 degrees to the horizontal. What is the landing position of the cannonball?x-directionvi = 8m/s*cosine (20)vf = 8 m/s*cosine (20)a = 0 m/s/sdelta-x = ?y-directionvi = 8m/s*sin(20)vf = -8m/s*sin(20)a = -9.8 m/s/sdelta-y = 0 mQuick OverviewQuick OverviewThe portfolio project is where you get to show off what you can do with physics. So far we've learned Forces & Vectors, Motion, Energy and Momentum so that's the focus of this portfolio.At home, you'll set up scenarios (details in instructions). You'll measure everything you can about those scenarios and use those measurements to do calculations and show off your physics skills. A scorecard gives you a list of measurements, calculations and skills that you can choose from. Finally, you'll present all those measurements, calculations and skills in a presentation. This can be a video, a powerpoint, a word document, a sway, a webpage, a padlet...you get to choose your favorite platform.The portfolio is worth 250 points and is due on Thursday, April 1 at 11:59 pm.Portfolio InstructionsPortfolio InstructionsAttached Files: PHY121 Portfolio 2 Scorecard Sp21.docx PHY121 Portfolio 2 Scorecard Sp21.docx - Alternative Formats (19.984 KB) PHY121 Portfolio 2 Instructions Sp21.docx PHY121 Portfolio 2 Instructions Sp21.docx - Alternative Formats (691.208 KB)Download and read this document (I put it in Word and PDF) for the details on the first portfolio. I've also edited it to make a blank scorecard for you to help you keep track of your score as you put your portfolio together. You'll be uploading your scorecard (with checkmarks where you think you've earned points) with your portfolio.Video examples of each scenarioVideo examples of each scenarioI built each scenario at my house and made these videos to show you samples in case the text instructions weren't good enough to help you see what you can do. Don't use my measurements/videos - you are expected to build your own at your home. Good luck! As always, let me know if you have questions.Here's a sample of the Ramp to Flat to Crash scenario:Next is the Table Dive:Finally is the Bounce:OPTIONAL: Using Pivot to Analyze Your Very Own VideosOPTIONAL: Using Pivot to Analyze Your Very Own VideosThe link to the Pivot Lab which you can use to analyze your videos is just below this item.Portfolio 2 Video Analysis (OPTIONAL)Portfolio 2 Video Analysis (OPTIONAL)Who and What Are You Allowed To Work With?Who and What Are You Allowed To Work With?You are expected to finish the portfolio by yourself. Do not do the scenarios with other people and do not share your own results. This is the equivalent of a take-home test where your work is your own.You are allowed to use all our notes and videos on Blackboard to help you as you go. You can also use the textbook and your old Connect work. Do not use other students in the class.If you are stuck, reach out to the professor, she is so happy to help!What if I need extra time?What if I need extra time?Portfolios are the equivalent of exams in the class, so late work is penalized. Portfolio 2 can be up to 1 week late and there is a 10 point per day penalty. If you turn it in after Thursday, April 8th at 11:59pm, your grade will be a zero.FAQ SectionFAQ SectionHello! Here's a helpful FAQ section for you! Right now it's based on questions from past sections but I will add new FAQs from you as needed. Check back here often :)1) I found coefficient of friction by doing the side experiment like in portfolio 1:You don't need to find coefficient of friction anymore, just so you know! There are other ways to figure it out. Please try NOT to use this.2) How should I organize this one?Follow our problem-solving method. First, read over the givens and make some measurements and the video of your setup. Second, draw diagrams, set up charts, Big Ugly equations or momentum equations. Third, show me your calculations and finally always circle your answers. Label the heck out of everything!3) How do I start?Check out our physics problem-solving strategy! It's really great for portfolio help. First explore your scenario and make measurements. Second, set up a diagram. Third, set up your equations that go with the diagram. Fourth, solve for everything you can from those equations. Fifth, maybe there's other things you can figure out (see the scorecard for things you haven't found yet and maybe you can figure out those, too!).4) Can I do all three scenarios? Or...do I have to do all three scenarios?Sure! You can do them all - solve for everything you can! If there's doubles, there's doubles - you get credit only once but think of it as insurance. If you've found that one scenario doesn't give you enough points, then for sure hop over and add the other ones in. 7) Can I get more than 250 points?YES! You can get up to 280 points.When You Turn Things In...When You Turn Things In...Turn in your project and turn in your Scorecard each time. This will help me grade it - if you tell me what points you are going for, then I know what to look for. Makes sense, right? Thanks!If you do a video or Padlet, please post a link to your video in YouTube or your Padlet along with your scorecard. Please do a new Padlet for each portfolio (but within one portfolio, you can do more than one scenario). Do not edit your padlets or videos after the due date! To be safe - don't even load up your Padlet after the due date until you see a grade for it in Blackboard. If you are making a Powerpoint, please use just black and white background - don't get fancy. Fancy = large filesize = may not upload = MONSTER AMOUNTS OF STRESS. Thanks!Upload your portfolio with plenty of time for possible technology glitches. I recommend finishing a day or two early just in case you can't get the files to upload and you need Professor's assistance!
Earn money selling
your Study Documents