You can use a balance.
You can use a simple technical balance if you don't want a great sensitivity.
You can use a balance; in laboratory an analytical balance.
You know it could be a scale
beaker
Acbnela
Idks
Just a regular ol' laboratory balance will do it.
nope
A set of Digital scales.
Holding 100mL of water (ebkare) Measuring 27 ml. of liquid (daudgtear Idnreiyc) Heating metals to a high temperature (ccureilb) Massing out 120 g of sodium chloride (acbnela) Suspending glassware over the Bunsen burner (rwei zeagu) Holding many test tubes filled with chemicals (estt ubet karc)
The answer to the question is 120 grams of water :)
The atomic mass of sodium, Na is 23.0 Amount of sodium = mass of sample / atomic mass = 120/23.0 = 5.22mol
The population of Douglas Equipment is 120.
The average sodium intake for Chinese people is SBP of 120-159
Yes.
If the supply voltage is Vs and the equipment voltage is Va, then the equipment will work if Va = Vs (equation). But if Vs / Va = 220 / 120 (equation) the equipment will fail.
Just add the two masses: 40 + 120 = 160 grams.
The exact mechanism of action is not known but may be related to damage of decidual cells by hypertonic sodium chloride within 0.5 hour after amniotic instillation of sodium chloride. The subsequent release of endogenous prostaglandins induces uterine contractions at about the 11th hour and begins cervical dilation after 11 hours. Hypertonic sodium chloride appears to increase the endogenous release of oxytocin via vasopressin and neurohypophysis stimulation; endogenous oxytocin increases uterine contractions and can potentially further sensitize the uterus to exogenous oxytocin . Efficacy varied widely in clinical studies using 40 grams of sodium chloride. The rate of failed abortions occurring between 24 and 120 hours from initial injection ranged from 0 to 28 per 100 abortions. Incomplete abortions or the failure to expel the placenta within 2 to 4 hours of aborting the fetus occurred at a rate of 30 per 100 abortions (range, 0 to 53 per 100 abortions) Intra-amniotic hypertonic sodium chloride use results in a live birth rate of 0.17 per 100 abortions, even though it is fetotoxic and a stillbirth usually results In the rare case of a live birth, fetal expiration usually occurs within hours of birth