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laboratory simulation ch the papers to the most likely contents of each…

Question

laboratory simulation
ch the papers to the most likely contents of each bottle.
paper a\tchoose match
paper b\tchoose match
paper c\toil
paper d\tchoose match

Explanation:

Response

To solve this problem, we analyze the appearance of the papers and typical properties of substances (like water, alcohol, oil, etc.) that affect how they spread on paper:

Paper A:

It looks dry (no visible spread). Substances that evaporate quickly or don’t spread much (e.g., alcohol, which evaporates rapidly) might leave little to no residue. So Paper A likely matches a substance like Alcohol (evaporates fast, minimal spread).

Paper B:

Has a small, faint spread. Substances with moderate spreading/evaporation (e.g., water, which spreads a bit but evaporates) could cause this. So Paper B likely matches Water.

Paper C:

You already selected “Oil.” Oil spreads widely and doesn’t evaporate quickly, creating a large, distinct patch—consistent with Paper C’s appearance.

Paper D:

Has a medium spread (more than B, less than C). A substance like Vinegar (or another liquid with moderate viscosity/spreading) could fit. Alternatively, if considering common lab substances, it might match a liquid with slower evaporation than water but faster than oil (e.g., a dilute solution).

Final Matches (assuming typical lab substances):
  • Paper A: Alcohol
  • Paper B: Water
  • Paper C: Oil (already selected)
  • Paper D: Vinegar (or similar medium-spreading liquid)

(Note: The exact matches depend on the full list of “Choose match” options, but the above logic uses typical properties of liquids and their interaction with paper.)

Answer:

To solve this problem, we analyze the appearance of the papers and typical properties of substances (like water, alcohol, oil, etc.) that affect how they spread on paper:

Paper A:

It looks dry (no visible spread). Substances that evaporate quickly or don’t spread much (e.g., alcohol, which evaporates rapidly) might leave little to no residue. So Paper A likely matches a substance like Alcohol (evaporates fast, minimal spread).

Paper B:

Has a small, faint spread. Substances with moderate spreading/evaporation (e.g., water, which spreads a bit but evaporates) could cause this. So Paper B likely matches Water.

Paper C:

You already selected “Oil.” Oil spreads widely and doesn’t evaporate quickly, creating a large, distinct patch—consistent with Paper C’s appearance.

Paper D:

Has a medium spread (more than B, less than C). A substance like Vinegar (or another liquid with moderate viscosity/spreading) could fit. Alternatively, if considering common lab substances, it might match a liquid with slower evaporation than water but faster than oil (e.g., a dilute solution).

Final Matches (assuming typical lab substances):
  • Paper A: Alcohol
  • Paper B: Water
  • Paper C: Oil (already selected)
  • Paper D: Vinegar (or similar medium-spreading liquid)

(Note: The exact matches depend on the full list of “Choose match” options, but the above logic uses typical properties of liquids and their interaction with paper.)