QUESTION IMAGE
Question
for each of the noted items on the ph scale, match the label that indicates (roughly) how many times more acidic they are compared to water.
labels: (10^+), (100^+), (1,000^+), (10,000^+)
drag each item above to its appropriate location in the image. note that every item may not have a match, while some items may have more than one match.
ph scale (vertical):
- 8: seawater (7.5–8.3)
- human blood (7.4)
- 7 (neutral): pure water
- milk (6.5)
- 6
- natural rainwater (5.6)
- 5
- tomatoes (4.5)
- 4
- oranges (3.5)
- 3
- lemons (2.3)
- 2: stomach acid (1.5–2.0)
- 1
The pH scale is logarithmic, meaning each whole number change in pH represents a tenfold change in acidity (or basicity). Pure water has a pH of 7. To determine how many times more acidic a substance is than water, we calculate the difference in pH from 7 and use \(10^{\text{pH difference}}\).
Step 1: Understand the pH difference formula
For a substance with pH \(p\), the acidity factor relative to water (pH 7) is \(10^{7 - p}\) (since lower pH means more acidic, so we subtract the substance's pH from 7 to get the exponent).
Step 2: Analyze each substance:
- Milk (pH 6.5):
pH difference: \(7 - 6.5 = 0.5\)? Wait, no—wait, the labels are \(10^+\), \(100^+\), \(1000^+\), \(10,000^+\), which correspond to \(10^1\), \(10^2\), \(10^3\), \(10^4\) (since each pH unit is a factor of 10). Wait, actually, the pH scale: each decrease of 1 pH unit is 10x more acidic. So:
- Water: pH 7.
- Milk: pH 6.5 → difference from 7 is \(7 - 6.5 = 0.5\)? No, the labels are \(10^+\) (10x), \(100^+\) (100x = \(10^2\)), \(1000^+\) (\(10^3\)), \(10,000^+\) (\(10^4\)). Let's list substances by pH and calculate \(10^{7 - \text{pH}}\):
- Milk (6.5): \(7 - 6.5 = 0.5\) → \(10^{0.5} \approx 3.16\) (not matching labels, maybe the problem uses whole pH units for simplicity).
- Natural rainwater (5.6): \(7 - 5.6 = 1.4\) → ~\(10^{1.4} \approx 25\) (no). Wait, maybe the problem rounds to whole pH differences. Let's check whole numbers:
- **Milk (6.5) ≈ pH 7? No, 6.5 is 0.5 below 7. Maybe the problem uses the closest whole number difference. Wait, the labels are \(10^+\) (10x), \(100^+\) (100x), \(1000^+\) (1000x), \(10,000^+\) (10,000x), which are \(10^1\), \(10^2\), \(10^3\), \(10^4\). So:
- Milk (pH 6.5): pH difference from 7 is \(7 - 6.5 = 0.5\) → not a whole number. Maybe the problem considers pH 6 (difference 1: \(10^1 = 10^+\)), pH 5 (difference 2: \(10^2 = 100^+\)), pH 4 (difference 3: \(10^3 = 1000^+\)), pH 3 (difference 4: \(10^4 = 10,000^+\))? Wait, no—wait, lower pH is more acidic. So:
- Milk (pH 6.5): closer to pH 7, but maybe the problem groups by pH values:
Let's list substances with their pH and the factor:
- Milk (6.5): pH 6.5 → difference from 7 is 0.5 → ~10^0.5 ≈ 3 (not matching). Maybe the problem uses the pH value's integer part:
- Milk (6.5): pH 6 (integer) → difference 1 → 10^1 = 10^+
- Natural rainwater (5.6): pH 5 (integer) → difference 2 → 10^2 = 100^+
- Tomatoes (4.5): pH 4 (integer) → difference 3 → 10^3 = 1000^+
- Oranges (3.5): pH 3 (integer) → difference 4 → 10^4 = 10,000^+
- Lemons (2.3): pH 2 (integer) → difference 5 → 10^5 (not a label)
- Stomach acid (1.5–2.0): pH 2 (integer) → difference 5 (not a label)
- Seawater (7.5–8.3): pH 8 (integer) → difference -1 (more basic, so not acidic)
- Human blood (7.4): pH 7 (neutral) → difference 0 (not acidic)
Wait, maybe the problem is structured as: each time the pH decreases by 1 (from 7), acidity increases by 10x. So:
- pH 6: 10x more acidic than water (\(10^+\))
- pH 5: 100x (\(100^+\))
- pH 4: 1000x (\(1000^+\))
- pH 3: 10,000x (\(10,000^+\))
Now match substances to their pH (rounded to nearest integer or by their pH value):
- Milk (6.5): pH ~6 → 10x (\(10^+\))
- Natural rainwater (5.6): pH ~5 → 100x (\(100^+\))
- Tomatoes (4.5): pH ~4 → 1000x (\(1000^+\))
- Oranges (3.5): pH ~3 → 10,000x (\(10,000^+\))
So the matches are:
- \(10^+\): Milk (6.5), maybe Natural rainwater? No, 5.6 is closer to 5. Wait, maybe the problem uses the pH value's distance from 7:
- Milk (6.5): 7…
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- \(10^+\) → Milk (6.5)
- \(100^+\) → Natural rainwater (5.6)
- \(1000^+\) → Tomatoes (4.5)
- \(10,000^+\) → Oranges (3.5)
(Other substances like lemons, stomach acid, seawater, blood have pH values that don’t align with the given labels, as their acidity factors exceed or don’t match \(10^+\), \(100^+\), \(1000^+\), \(10,000^+\).)