...PHS 101 Exam Review for Chapters 3, 4, & Gases Chapter 3 Objectives 1. Define work and calculate for a given situation. 2. Recognize the units for work. 3. Define energy and understand its relation to work. 4. Distinguish between kinetic and potential energy. 5. Calculate the kinetic and potential energy of an object or body. 6. State the law of conservation of energy. 7. State the law of conservation of mechanical energies and apply to freely-falling objects. 8. Define power and calculate for a given situation. 9. Recognize the units for power. 10. Identify the various forms of energy and recognize examples of each. 11. Distinguish between alternative energy sources and renewable energy sources and identify examples of each. Chapter 4 Objectives 1. Identify the major points of the kinetic molecular theory. 2. Distinguish between temperature and heat. 3. Define thermometer. 4. Describe the principle behind which bimetallic and liquid-in-glass thermometers work. 5. Give the b.p. and f.p. of water in all systems of measurement (oC, oF, K). 6. Relate the size of a single oF, oC, and K degree to each other. 7. Convert from one temperature to another. 8. Describe the relation between heat and molecular kinetic energy. 9. Recognize the units of heat. 10. Describe the thermal expansion properties of substances. 11. Define specific heat and latent heats (Lv and Lf) and use to calculate heat changes for a substance. 12. Define the three methods of...
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...Sunnyvale is which would be great if I go to college there as I’m accustomed to living in the same environment. Another benefit of going to California Institute of technology(from here on out it's going to be referred as Cal Tech) is that the living cost won't be as expensive for me as I have a relative I can stay with. Most likely on breaks and some weekends, I can go and visit my family as it's about an hour drive from Pasadena to Sunnyvale. However this leads me to another problem as if I want to go to places other than my parent’s house, then I would actually need to buy a car. I was just planning on going to Cal Tech by bike as this would save me money since I don’t have my own car, as well as gas. However I’m pretty sure if getting a car as well as paying...
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...2014-2015 People’s Guide to HEALTH, WELFARE AND OTHER SERVICES SACRAMENTO COUNTY $ ? Introduction The People’s Guide is a practical self-advocacy information guide and directory on how to get food, income, jobs and training, housing, health and dental care, legal advice, and other important help from local, state and federal programs and community services in Sacramento County. We don’t need to tell you these are hard times! Foreclosures, high unemployment, homelessness on the rise and the city, county, state and federal budgets either eliminating or making deep cuts to most of the programs talked about in this guide. These cuts mean less help for lowincome individuals, families, seniors and homeless people to access the these life-saving programs. It means reduced benefits, fewer workers, tighter eligibility rules, long lines and longer waits. not only is a self-advocacy guide to these programs, but also gives you advice on what you can do if your are treated unfairly or do not receive what you are entitled to by law. The guide is dedicated to helping all people overcome barriers when they are trying to get help. Politicians often use the money for other things than education, health, welfare and social services. But, when the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, the gap has very bad effects on our entire society. You can help close that gap. You do not need to read the entire book; just find the topic in the table of contents. But, remember, that if you are eligible...
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...skateboarding is often treated as a type of transportation tool. At Cal Poly Pomona, skateboarding along with other coasting devices become increasingly popular for students as an alternative means of transportation, but at the same time, they appear to the decision makers as a target for policy actions. Under current school policy, coasting transportation is prohibited at Cal Poly Pomona. In other words, students and staffs who ride skateboard, scooter and other coasting devices on campus will be warned or even ticketed by university police officers. However, a lot of students do not...
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...Method Number: EPA 200.7 Revision Number: 3.0 Date: September 3, 2010 Clinical Laboratory of San Bernardino, Inc. Standard Operating Procedure for the Determination of Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma Spectroscopy 1. SCOPE AND APPLICATION: 1.1 This method provides procedures for the determination of dissolved elements in ground waters, surface waters, and drinking water supplies. It may also be used for the determination of total recoverable element concentrations in these waters and wastewaters. Dissolved elements can be determined after suitable filtration and acid preservation. Acid digestion procedures are required prior to the determination of total recoverable elements. To reduce potential interference, dissolved solids should be < 0.2% (w/v). Prepared samples may require dilution prior to analysis to avoid physical interferences. The method is applicable to the following analytes: Chemical Abstract Services Registry Numbers (CAS-No.) 7429-90-5 7440-39-3 7440-42-8 7440-70-2 7440-48-4 7440-50-8 7439-89-6 7439-95-4 7439-96-5 7439-98-7 7440-41-7 7440-43-9 7440-47-3 7440-02-0 7440-22-4 7440-09-7 7631-86-9 7440-23-5 7440-66-6 Dectection Limit of Reporting (DLR) 50 ppb 100 ppb 100 ppb 1 ppm 10 ppb 50 ppb 100 ppb / 40 ppb 1 ppm 20 ppb / 4 ppb 10 ppb 1.0 ppb 1.0 ppb 10 ppb 10 ppb 10 ppb 1 ppm 0.5 ppm 1 ppm 50 ppb 1.2 1.3 1.4 Analyte Aluminum (Al) Barium (Ba) Boron (B) Calcium (Ca) Cobalt (Co) Copper (Cu) Iron (Fe) Magnesium (Mg) Manganese (Mn) Molybdenum (Mo) Beryllium...
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...Copyright © 2002 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. Revised Version, copyright © 2004 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. N.B. PLEASE PERMISSION. NOTE THAT DETAILS OF ORDERING INSEAD CASES ARE FOUND ON THE BACK COVER. COPIES MAY NOT BE MADE WITHOUT 1 5041 “There are worse places in the world to be in December than Trinidad,” thought Ed Dowling, as he spotted the first white beaches from his seat on the Miami-Trinidad flight. “Look, Steve, we are flying close by our plant,” he said to Steve Elmquist, pointing at a significant landmark on the coastline below them (see Exhibit 1). Dowling was executive vice-president for operations at Cleveland Cliffs Inc., and Elmquist was the general manager of Cliffs and Associates Ltd. (CAL), which was co-owned by Cleveland Cliffs and Lurgi Metallurgie GmbH, the German process technology company, following a recent joint venture. Neither had said much since starting their journey some eight hours before in Cleveland, Ohio, where they had reported to the board members of Cleveland Cliffs on the status of the plant that lay just below them. The purpose of the plant was to produce Direct Reduced Iron (DRI), a product of great importance to Electric Arc Furnace steel mills, often called “mini-mills”. Mini-mills used mostly scrap as their iron source, thus eliminating the initial process step (and the associated capital needs) of extracting iron from ore in the traditional integrated...
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...Copyright © 2002 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. Revised Version, copyright © 2004 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. N.B. PLEASE PERMISSION. NOTE THAT DETAILS OF ORDERING INSEAD CASES ARE FOUND ON THE BACK COVER. COPIES MAY NOT BE MADE WITHOUT 1 5041 “There are worse places in the world to be in December than Trinidad,” thought Ed Dowling, as he spotted the first white beaches from his seat on the Miami-Trinidad flight. “Look, Steve, we are flying close by our plant,” he said to Steve Elmquist, pointing at a significant landmark on the coastline below them (see Exhibit 1). Dowling was executive vice-president for operations at Cleveland Cliffs Inc., and Elmquist was the general manager of Cliffs and Associates Ltd. (CAL), which was co-owned by Cleveland Cliffs and Lurgi Metallurgie GmbH, the German process technology company, following a recent joint venture. Neither had said much since starting their journey some eight hours before in Cleveland, Ohio, where they had reported to the board members of Cleveland Cliffs on the status of the plant that lay just below them. The purpose of the plant was to produce Direct Reduced Iron (DRI), a product of great importance to Electric Arc Furnace steel mills, often called “mini-mills”. Mini-mills used mostly scrap as their iron source, thus eliminating the initial process step (and the associated capital needs) of extracting iron from ore in the traditional integrated...
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...Copyright © 2002 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. Revised Version, copyright © 2004 INSEAD-Wharton, France/USA. N.B. PLEASE PERMISSION. NOTE THAT DETAILS OF ORDERING INSEAD CASES ARE FOUND ON THE BACK COVER. COPIES MAY NOT BE MADE WITHOUT 1 5041 “There are worse places in the world to be in December than Trinidad,” thought Ed Dowling, as he spotted the first white beaches from his seat on the Miami-Trinidad flight. “Look, Steve, we are flying close by our plant,” he said to Steve Elmquist, pointing at a significant landmark on the coastline below them (see Exhibit 1). Dowling was executive vice-president for operations at Cleveland Cliffs Inc., and Elmquist was the general manager of Cliffs and Associates Ltd. (CAL), which was co-owned by Cleveland Cliffs and Lurgi Metallurgie GmbH, the German process technology company, following a recent joint venture. Neither had said much since starting their journey some eight hours before in Cleveland, Ohio, where they had reported to the board members of Cleveland Cliffs on the status of the plant that lay just below them. The purpose of the plant was to produce Direct Reduced Iron (DRI), a product of great importance to Electric Arc Furnace steel mills, often called “mini-mills”. Mini-mills used mostly scrap as their iron source, thus eliminating the initial process step (and the associated capital needs) of extracting iron from ore in the traditional integrated...
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...John Stokely and AAA Auto Dealers Jennifer L. Beverly Kaplan University PA 165 Professor Fiano December 19, 2011 Memorandum of Law From: Jennifer L. Beverly To: Astrid Fiano, Esq. Re: John Stokely and AAA Auto Dealers Date: December 19, 2011 Question Presented Is AAA Auto Dealers liable for John’s negligence? Brief Answer AAA Auto Dealers is liable for Mr. Stokely’s negligence committed within the scope of employment. Mr. Stokely’s actions fall within the scope of employment because driving to the manufacturing facility was business related. Mr. Stokely’s boss accompanied him to the manufacturing facility. Facts John Stokely is a sales executive for AAA Auto Dealers, a local automobile dealership. He often drives to the manufacturing facility, which is 150 miles from the dealership, to check on new orders. John’s employer reimburses him for gasoline, food, and lodging, and provides John with a dealer car to drive. While driving to the manufacturing plant, John decided to stop by his cousin’s house for dinner. His boss accompanied him on the visit “to get a decent meal for a change.” While on the way there, John collided with and injured a motorcyclist. Discussion In the case of Largey v. Intrastate Radiotelephone, Inc a motorcycle driver was severely injured by an individual driver who the courts found to be an employee of the appellant. The court found that the driver...
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...SCHAUM'S OUTLINE OF THEORY AND PROBLEMS OF COLLEGE PHYSICS Ninth Edition . FREDERICK J. BUECHE, Ph.D. Distinguished Professor at Large University of Dayton EUGENE HECHT, Ph.D. Professor of Physics Adelphi University . SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES McGRAW-HILL New York St. Louis San Francisco Auckland Bogota Caracas Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi San Juan Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto McGraw-Hill abc Copyright © 1997, 1989, 1979, 1961, 1942, 1940, 1939, 1936 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 0-07-1367497 The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: 0-07-008941-8. All trademarks are trademarks of their respective owners. Rather than put a trademark symbol after every occurrence of a trademarked name, we use names in an editorial fashion only, and to the benefit of the trademark owner, with no intention of infringement of the trademark. Where such designations appear in this book, they have been printed with initial caps. McGraw-Hill eBooks are available at special quantity discounts to use as premiums and sales promotions, or for use in corporate training programs. For more...
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...3d (F.2d and F.3d). • District court decisions are published by West in the unofficial reporter, the Federal Supplement (F. Supp.) State cases & West Regional Reporters • 28 states publish their cases officially. • The other 22 states rely on the unofficial West reporters to publish their cases in seven regional reporters: – – – – – – North Eastern (N.E. and N.E.2d) North Western (N.W. and N.W.2d) Pacific (P. and P.2d) South Eastern (S.E. and S.E.2d) South Western (S.W. and S.W.2d) Southern (S. and S.2d). New York and California are Odd • The intermediate court decisions of these states are also published by West in the New York Supplement (N.Y.S. and N.Y.S.2d) and in the California Reporter (Cal. Rptr.), respectively. How to Cite Cases Jackson v. Green, 204 So. 2d 94 (Fla. 1974) case name + reporter...
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...of t-"get-tough attitude" towards quality control engineering stated that:(quality-control jobs .after the Exxon Valdez oil spill. Over a three were restructured to allow inspectors to mon to-four month period, he wrote 200 so-called itor work in real time so that immediate cor- f~ "discrepancy reports" indicating quality con rections could be made; the inspectors were trol problems 'in his area. These compared making less money because they no longer with only 3 or 4: discrepancy reports that worked overtime although their hourly pay were written over the entire prior 13-year had been increased; cathodic monitors were period. Notwithstanding, during his time used once a year; a program was in place to with the company, Alyeska reduced the num inspect internally all tanks by 1995; and, that ,ber of inspectors from 8 to 4 and demoted neither state nor federal law dictated as to Plumblee from the position of senior quality how often vessels must be inspected.~ control inspector tp quality control coordina James Schooley charged Alyeska with tor. He also reported that he was forced by his ignoring his warning that an improperly con superiors to visit a mental health clinic to structed fire-control system might fail during det.ermine why he complained so much. an emergency. He stated that crucial pipes Plumblee was fired by Alyeska in November had not been strongly welded together and 1991 because he refused to accept the pay cut that the .,foam they carried might not reach a...
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...transfer of oxygen dissolved in the liquid to the cell. It is calculated using the dynamic method which is usually used for vessels which are less than 1m in height because there is nitrogen gas hold-up in the vessel when air is reintroduced and the measurement of concentration of oxygen in the liquid does not reflect the kinetics of simple oxygen transfer until a hold-up of air in established. The measured parameters included gassed power (Pg), impeller speed, flow rate (indirectly superficial gas velocity) and DOT%. It was seen that as the power input was increased, the KLa increased for the same flow rate and that this increase was greater than increase in the flow rate of the gas, which shows confirms the results described in the literature. Introduction (326 words) Cells in aerobic cultures require oxygen for metabolism and growth. The rate of oxygen transfer from aerated liquid to the cell is especially important at high cell densities, when cell growth is likely to be limited by the availability of oxygen in the medium. The solubility of oxygen in aqueous solutions at ambient temperature and pressure is only about 10 ppm, (Doran, 1998) which is quickly consumed by the cell and necessitates constant replacement by sparging. The concentration gradient (cAL*-cAL) is essentially small, so ensuring effective mass transfer becomes difficult. Therefore, it is absolutely vital that these factors are accounted for in fermenter design. In...
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...MGMT 597 Week 2 Assignment: Cases 14.2, 16.10, 18.2, 20.3 Ifeyinwa Onyekwena Keller Graduate School of Management 14.2 - Real Property Robert Briggs and his wife purchased a home located at 167 Lower Orchard Drive, Levittown, Pennsylvania. They made a down payment and borrowed the balance on a 30-year mortgage. Six years later, when Mr. and Mrs. Briggs were behind on their mortgage payments, they entered into an oral contract to sell the house to Winfield and Emma Sackett if the Sacketts would pay the three months’ arrearages on the loan and agree to make the future payments on the mortgage. Mrs. Briggs and Mrs. Sackett were sisters. The Sacketts paid the arrearages, moved into the house, and continued to live there. Fifteen years later, Robert Briggs filed an action to void the oral contract as in violation of the Statute of Frauds and evict the Sacketts from the house. Who wins? Briggs v. Sackett, 275 Pa. Super. 13, 418 A.2d 586, Web 1980 Pa.Super. Lexis 2034 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania) In this case the statute of frauds applies in 3 ways. The statute of frauds states that a written contract is required under the following circumstances present in the case: • When real property is involved – A home is classified as real property, therefore any transfer of ownership is required to be written; • When the contract cannot be performed in one year – Since the mortgage transfer had a remaining duration of 24+ years (including payments in arrears) it satisfies the criteria...
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...(BFW), was overseeing the development of the winery’s environmental management system (EMS). Matt was working with Chris Benziger, partner and national sales manager, to ensure that development of the EMS was consistent with BFW’s operational and strategic direction. It was February 2003 and Matt and Chris had already invested countless hours in the EMS, which was being developed with assistance from the California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA). Through its EMS winery pilot project, Cal/EPA hoped to design an EMS template that eventually could be made available to other wineries. Furthermore, Cal/EPA was attempting to develop a template that was consistent with ISO 14001, an internationally recognized standard for environmental management systems. Cal/EPA had selected BFW in June 2000 as one of two pilot wineries because of the winery’s proactive commitment to environmental policies and the significant environmental advances it had already made. Matt believed that considerable progress had been made on the company’s EMS. With Cal/EPA’s assistance, BFW had developed a formal environmental policy, identified and prioritized its environmental impacts, and established objectives and targets. However, there were still many steps to be carried out in establishing a full-fledged EMS. Further development would require time-consuming efforts in writing standardized operating procedures and in establishing document control and recordkeeping procedures. Also, because Matt and Chris ...
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