Damn it, been on silver for a while. Tried making words out of all the letters but no success. Same with the units for each of the letters. gnrkphCE? gnRkBCJ? Am I even close lol
Damn it, been on silver for a while. Tried making words out of all the letters but no success. Same with the units for each of the letters. gnrkphCE? gnRkBCJ? Am I even close lol
The first one is close. Think about about charge equals.the letters 2-4 are wrong.everyhing else is right.
Damn it, been on silver for a while. Tried making words out of all the letters but no success. Same with the units for each of the letters. gnrkphCE? gnRkBCJ? Am I even close lol
Seriously, the best thing to do is ignore the random beehive. If I ever get into Cambridge I'm going to ask Mr Keeler just how exactly that has anything at all to do with the question :/
The beehive most likely represents a "spelling bee"
No, they aren't constants and they are not the units either. It therefore cannot be C.
Think about what each of them equals. You've already found these:
(H-TS)=G -log(H+)=pH mc^2=E
Q is assosciated with charge yes, but it's not supposed to be its' units. How do you calculate Q?
Spoiler
N shouldn't even be in there, don't know where you've gotten that from. As for K, you've incorrectly re-arranged the Arrhenius Equation.
Thanks for the help, although I am not sure if the entire response was directed at me; as I was wondering how the user got N also. I guessed that maybe they thought that since Na is avogadro's constant, the letter might be n to represent amount of substance
Thanks again though - I'm going to have a look at the question again
Chemguide is great for a-level. Some of the more advanced stuff I usually try wikipedia.
Thank you I know they are stretching AS knowledge but are there any specific areas or common topics they like to pick up on. I understand its not like normal past papers, but are there any specific areas I could look into in more detail.
Thank you I know they are stretching AS knowledge but are there any specific areas or common topics they like to pick up on. I understand its not like normal past papers, but are there any specific areas I could look into in more detail.
Nah. I did it last year (gold ) and you just need to know AS chemistry like the back of your hand.