answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
BaLLatris [955]
2 years ago
7

Marianne designs an experiment involving electrically charged objects. She wants to know which objects will be attracted to a ne

gatively charged balloon. Identify the test variable, the outcome variable, and the control variable for this experiment.
WILL GIVE BRAINIST
Chemistry
2 answers:
Paul [167]2 years ago
8 0

Answer:

OUTCOME VARIABLE: Attraction to negatively charged balloon

Explanation:  

In an experiment, two major variables must be included viz: the independent variable and the dependent variable. The independent variable also referred to as the test variable is the variable that is being changed in the experiment while the dependent or outcome variable is the variable that responds to the changes made to the independent variable. The outcome variable is the variable that is measured in an experiment.

In this experiment involving Marianne wanting to know which objects will be attracted to a negatively charged balloon. The type of objects are the independent variable while the ATTRACTION is the outcome or dependent variable as it is dependent on the type of object used.

That other person deserves brainiest.

svet-max [94.6K]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

When one object is rubbed against another, static electricity can be created. This is because the rubbing creates a negative charge that is carried by electrons. The electrons can build up to produce static electricity. For example, when you shuffle your feet across a carpet, you are creating many surface contacts between your feet and the carpet, allowing electrons to transfer to you, thereby building up a static charge on your skin. When you touch another person or an object, you can suddenly discharge the static as an electrical shock.

Similarly, when you rub a balloon on your head it causes opposite static charges to build up both on your hair and the balloon. Consequently, when you pull the balloon slowly away from your head, you can see these two opposite static charges attracting one another and making your hair stand up.

Materials

• Balloon

• An object made out of wool (such as a sweater, scarf, blanket or ball of yarn)

• Stopwatch

• A wall

• A partner (optional)

Preparation

• Blow up the balloon and tie off the end.

• Have your partner prepare to use the stopwatch.

Procedure

• Hold the balloon in a way that your hand covers as little of its surface area as possible, such as by using only your thumb and pointer finger or by gripping the balloon by its neck where it is tied off.

• Rub the balloon on the woolly object once, in one direction.

• Hold the balloon up on the wall with the side that was rubbed against the wool facing the wall, then release it. Does the balloon stay stuck on the wall? If the balloon stays stuck, have your partner immediately start the stopwatch to time how long the balloon remains bound to the wall. If the balloon does not stick, move to the next step.

• Touch the balloon to a metal object. Why do you think this is important to do?

• Repeat the above process but each time increase the number of times you rub the balloon on the woolly object. Rub the balloon in the same direction each time. (Do not rub the balloon back and forth.)

Observations and results

In general, did the balloon stick to the wall for a longer amount of time as you increased the number of times you rubbed the balloon on the woolly object?

Wool is a conductive material, which means it readily gives away its electrons. Consequently, when you rub a balloon on wool, this causes the electrons to move from the wool to the balloon's surface. The rubbed part of the balloon now has a negative charge. Objects made of rubber, such as the balloon, are electrical insulators, meaning that they resist electric charges flowing through them. This is why only part of the balloon may have a negative charge (where the wool rubbed it) and the rest may remain neutral.

When the balloon has been rubbed enough times to gain a sufficient negative charge, it will be attracted to the wall. Although the wall should normally have a neutral charge, the charges within it can rearrange so that a positively charged area attracts the negatively charged balloon. Because the wall is also an electrical insulator, the charge is not immediately discharged. However, because metal is an electrical conductor, when you rub the balloon against metal the extra electrons in the balloon quickly leave the balloon and move into the metal so the balloon is no longer attracted and does not adhere.

HOPE IT HELPS

PLEASE MARK ME BRAINLIEST

You might be interested in
How many total ions are present in 347g of cacl2?
vladimir1956 [14]

In 1 mole of CaCl_{2}, there are 3 moles of ions, 1 mole of Ca^{2+} and 2 mole of Cl^{-1}.

CaCl_{2}\rightarrow Ca^{2+}+2Cl^{-}

Molar mass of CaCl_{2} is 110.98 g/mol. Calculating number of moles from given mass as follows:

n=\frac{m}{M}=\frac{347 g}{110.98 g/mol}=3.12 mol

Thus, number of moles of ions will be 3\times 3.12 mol=9.38 mol.

Since, 1 mole of any substance has 6.023\times 10^{23} units of that substance where 6.023\times 10^{23}  is Avogadro's number.

Thus, 9.38 mol of ions will have 9.38\times 6.023\times 10^{23}=5.65\times 10^{24} number of ions.

Therefore, total number of ions in 347 g of CaCl_{2} is  5.65\times 10^{24}.


8 0
2 years ago
1.2 moles of (NH4)3PO3
Aleks04 [339]
1.2 moles of (nph4)3po3 is.......159.6 grams
3 0
2 years ago
Iron (Fe) undergoes an allotropic transformation at 912°C: upon heating from a BCC (α phase) to an FCC (γ phase). Accompanying t
Alex

Answer:

false thought ia ion of neon = clarity active

Explanation:

x = 81254 \: and \: y = 91284

8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Which is the correct Lewis structure for fluorine, which is a group 7A element?
Yuliya22 [10]
The correct Lewis structure for Fluorine is A.
4 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
During the discussion of gaseous diffusion for enriching uranium, it was claimed that 235UF6 diffuses 0.4% faster than 238UF6. S
Kay [80]

<u>Answer:</u> The below calculations proves that the rate of diffusion of ^{235}UF_6 is 0.4 % faster than the rate of diffusion of ^{238}UF_6

<u>Explanation:</u>

To calculate the rate of diffusion of gas, we use Graham's Law.

This law states that the rate of effusion or diffusion of gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the molar mass of the gas. The equation given by this law follows the equation:

\text{Rate of diffusion}\propto \frac{1}{\sqrt{\text{Molar mass of the gas}}}

We are given:

Molar mass of ^{235}UF_6=349.034348g/mol

Molar mass of ^{238}UF_6=352.041206g/mol

By taking their ratio, we get:

\frac{Rate_{(^{235}UF_6)}}{Rate_{(^{238}UF_6)}}=\sqrt{\frac{M_{(^{238}UF_6)}}{M_{(^{235}UF_6)}}}

\frac{Rate_{(^{235}UF_6)}}{Rate_{(^{238}UF_6)}}=\sqrt{\frac{352.041206}{349.034348}}\\\\\frac{Rate_{(^{235}UF_6)}}{Rate_{(^{238}UF_6)}}=\frac{1.00429816}{1}

From the above relation, it is clear that rate of effusion of ^{235}UF_6 is faster than ^{238}UF_6

Difference in the rate of both the gases, Rate_{(^{235}UF_6)}-Rate_{(^{238}UF_6)}=1.00429816-1=0.00429816

To calculate the percentage increase in the rate, we use the equation:

\%\text{ increase}=\frac{\Delta R}{Rate_{(^{235}UF_6)}}\times 100

Putting values in above equation, we get:

\%\text{ increase}=\frac{0.00429816}{1.00429816}\times 100\\\\\%\text{ increase}=0.4\%

The above calculations proves that the rate of diffusion of ^{235}UF_6 is 0.4 % faster than the rate of diffusion of ^{238}UF_6

3 0
2 years ago
Other questions:
  • [16]. A 3.0 L container holds a sample of hydrogen gas at 150 kPa. If the pressure increases to 2 atm and the temperature remain
    14·1 answer
  • What is the pH of a 0.050 M triethylamine, (C2H5)3N, solution? Kb for triethylamine is 5.3 ´ 10-4. Question options: 1) 11.69 2)
    9·1 answer
  • The following steps refer to various stages in transmission at a chemical synapse. 1. Neurotransmitter binds with receptors asso
    6·1 answer
  • A sample of a solid labeled as NaCl may be impure. a student analyzes the sample and determines that it contains 75 percent chlo
    6·1 answer
  • PLEASE HELP!!! The image represents the reaction between a certain number of molecules of N2 and H2.
    14·2 answers
  • Reserpine is a natural product isolated from the roots of the shrub Rauwolfia serpentina. It was first synthesized in 1956 by No
    9·1 answer
  • What is the composition, in atom percent, of an alloy that consists of a) 5.5 wt% Pb and b) 94.5 wt% of Sn? Assume that the atom
    12·1 answer
  • How many liters of 3.0 M NaOH solution will react with 2.4 mol H2SO4? (Remember to balance the equation.)
    12·1 answer
  • A student obtained a clean flask. She weighed the flask and stopper on an analytical balance and found the total mass to be 34.2
    14·1 answer
  • How much 2 M HBr is needed to neutralize 380 mL of 0.1 M NH4OH?
    14·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!