Direction: Answer the following questions. (5 pts. each)
1. Jewel is baking a chocolate cake. The recipes calls for 3/4 cup of cocoa powder. Jewel has a 1/4
cup only with which to measure. How is she going to measure 3/4 cup of cocoa powder?
2. You need 1 cup of all purpose cream for the pasta that you are trying to cook for your mother.
How are you going to measure 1 cup of all purpose cream if you only have a tablespoon?
Answers
Answer:
block of the periodic table is a set of elements unified by the orbitals their valence electrons or vacancies lie in.[1] The term appears to have been first used by Charles Janet.[2] Each block is named after its characteristic orbital: s-block, p-block, d-block, and f-block.
A long periodic table showing, from left to right: the s-, d-, f-, and p-blocks. The f-block, normally shown as a footnote, here splits the d-block into two. While this splitting is the more common form in the literature, a minority advocates placing the f-block between the s- and d-blocks.[1]
The block names (s, p, d, and f) are derived from the spectroscopic notation for the value of an electron's azimuthal quantum number: shape (0), principal (1), diffuse (2), or fundamental (3). Succeeding notations proceed in alphabetical order, as g, h,
Answer:
option no 2
Explanation: