Biology, asked by sandyyd9880, 1 year ago

Liquid 1 reacts with Liquid 2, producing a solid and a gas. Using this scenario, which supports the law of conservation of mass? mass of Liquid 1 + mass of solid = mass of Liquid 2 + mass of gas mass of Liquid 1 – mass of solid = mass of Liquid 2 – mass of gas mass of Liquid 1 – mass of Liquid 2 = mass of solid + mass of gas mass of Liquid 1 + mass of Liquid 2 = mass of solid + mass of gas

Answers

Answered by shoaibahmad131
37

The law of conservation of mass is observed in a balanced chemical equation, which is a chemical equation that shows all mass is conserved throughout the reaction. In a balanced chemical equation, the number and kinds of atoms on each side of the equation should be equal.

in this phenomenon it is denoted by

mass of Liquid 1 + mass of solid = mass of Liquid 2 + mass of gas mass of Liquid


Answered by thewordlycreature
20

mass of Liquid 1 + mass of solid = mass of Liquid 2 + mass of gas mass of Liquid

The law of conservation of mass or principle of mass conservation states that for any system closed to all transfers of matter and energy, the mass of the system must remain constant over time, as system's mass cannot change, so quantity cannot be added nor removed. Hence, the quantity of mass is conserved over time.

Similar questions