Asked by mani
Question 4 (1 point)
The chemical equation shows only the reactants and one product.
How many H atoms must be present in the second product that is formed?
a
1
b
2
c
3
d
4
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I can't answer that from the information shown — the actual chemical equation (reactants and the one known product) is missing. Please paste the equation or a photo of the question.
If you want to solve it yourself, here are the steps you can follow:
1. Write the formulas of all reactants and products (including the unknown second product).
2. Put coefficients (variables if needed) in front of each species.
3. For each element, write an equation equating atoms on the reactant and product sides.
4. Solve the system of equations for the coefficients.
5. The number of H atoms in the second product = (coefficient of that product) × (number of H atoms per molecule of that product).
If you post the equation I’ll balance it and tell you which answer (a–d) is correct.
If you want to solve it yourself, here are the steps you can follow:
1. Write the formulas of all reactants and products (including the unknown second product).
2. Put coefficients (variables if needed) in front of each species.
3. For each element, write an equation equating atoms on the reactant and product sides.
4. Solve the system of equations for the coefficients.
5. The number of H atoms in the second product = (coefficient of that product) × (number of H atoms per molecule of that product).
If you post the equation I’ll balance it and tell you which answer (a–d) is correct.
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