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Revision Thread

Oops, apparently I was talking about something else which ALSO uses the same symbol. I know it's used in Functions, Probability, all graphs done at school level etc. though. IDK, things are different in Oz, but not THAT different.
 
It's very easy. If you put some effort into it, getting 90+ is not hard. But more to the point, it doesn't matter at all.
My school is offering full scholarship for Band 6s in everything if I get it the $2500 my parents would of spent will not go and my parents promised me a nice sum of the money too.
 
My school is offering full scholarship for Band 6s in everything if I get it the $2500 my parents would of spent will not go and my parents promised me a nice sum of the money too.
That sounds really awesome. Good luck with it :toast:
 
if all Bloomys are Glommys, some Glommys are Stommys, and all Stommys are Brommys, then why am I better than Hipmonlee?
 
turn off the computer.
There are people who study from the computer, me being one of them; on some subjects I'd study the slides on the computer rather than actual paper, especially if they have pictures like Anatomy and Pathology.
 
Specific heat capacity is heat capacity (or thermal capacity)/mass

(if something ever says heat capacity meaning specific heat capacity you can tell from the units)
 
J/KG as opposed to J I believe. Specific Heat Capacity precise definition, if my memory serves me - the amount of energy required to raise a one kilogram mass of an object by 1 degree centigrade/Kelvin.
 
is it not one mole of a substance?

that would make more sense considering the definition of the enthalpy change of combustion/formation is the enthalpy transfer when one mole of a substance is burned completely in oxygen/formed from its constituent elements

or something like that
 
Dihydrogenoxide. An amphoteric compound which contains a positive ion (H+) and a negative ion (OH-). It is a very good solvent for most salts, and allows them to conduct electricity. This is most commonly seen when NaCl is dissolved in H20.

And you can drink it and not die. Thats a pretty rare property of liquids. Pretty much reserved to that and ethanol.
 
It's a polar molecule and it's amphiprotic; ie it can act as a base to accept a proton to form H3O+ or donate a proton to form OH-. Also has a fucking high specific heat capacity and does cool shit like surface tension and capillary action due to intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Also its maximum density occurs at around 4 degrees Celsius which is explained by chemical physics way beyond that of a first year uni student like myself.
 
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