Question | Answer |
HCL | Hydrochroic acid |
H2SO4 | Sulfuric acid |
H2CO3 | Carbonic acid |
HC2H3O2 | Acetic acid |
HNO3 | Nitric acid |
HCOOH | Formic acid |
HBr | Hydrobromic acid |
HClO4 | Perchloric acid |
H3PO4 | Phosphoric acid |
H2CrO4 | Chromic acid |
moon Titania | Uranus |
moon Titan | Saturn |
moon Triton | Saturn |
moon Miranda | Uranus |
moon Io | Jupiter |
moon Deimos | Mars |
moon Oberon | Uranus |
moon Ganymede | Jupiter |
moon Callisto | Jupiter |
Tethys | Saturn |
Phobos | Mars |
SI Electerical resistance | Ohm |
SI Luminous intensity | Candela |
SI Frequnecy | Hertz |
SI Force | Newton |
The planets between which the asteroid belt is found | Mars and Jupiter |
The planet with the shortest period of revolution | Mecury |
The only planet on which a day is longer than a year | Venus |
The largest moon in the solar system | Ganymede |
The outermost Jovian planet | Neptune |
The planet around which Maranda and Ariel revolve | Uranus |
The planet with the highest recorded surface temperature | Venus |
The largest known asteroid in the solar system | Ceres |
The planet with the tallest mountain | Mars |
The two moons that revolve around Mars | Deimos and Phobos |
Stars And Costellations Betelgeuse | Orion |
Stars And Costellations Sirius | Canis Major |
Stars And Costellations Vega | Lyra |
Stars And Costellations Altair | Aquilla |
Stars And Costellations Pollux | Gemini |
Stars And Costellations Alderbaran | Taurus |
Stars And Costellations Rigel | Orion |
Stars And Costellations Procyon | Canis Major |
Stars And Costellations Spica | Virgo |
Stars And Costellations Deneb | Cygnus |
Stars And Costellations Canopus | Cygnus |
Stars And Costellations Canopus | Carina |
Term for the family of compounds that are composed of oxygen and another element | Oxides |
Term for any positively charged ion | Cation |
Name for the principle which states that disturbed systems adjust themselves in order to minimize the disturbance | Le Chatelier |
Meaning of the acronym EMF | Electromotive force |
Ultimately, this Zaire-born disease liquefies interal organs | Ebola Virus (Hemorrhagic Fever) |
Caused mostly by animal bites, symptoms include convulsions, drooling, and a loss of muscle function | Rabies |
This stiffening, paralyzing, potentially fatal disease is that shich President Franklin Roosevelt suffered. | Polio |
Also known as variola, it now only exists in storage at two labs in the entire world. Before its declared eradication in 1980 it was an often fatal disease | Smallpox |
Ultimately, this Zaire-born disease liquifies internal organs | Ebola Virus (Hemorrhagic Fever) |
Caused mostly by animal bites, symptoms include convulsions, drooling, and a loss of muscle function | Rabies |
This stiffening, paralyzing, potentially fatal disease is that which President Franklin Roosevelt suffered | Polio |
Also known as variola, it now only exists in storage at two labs in the entire world. Before its declared eradication in 1980 it was an often fatal disease. | Smallpox |
The study of the heart, its functions, and diseases | Cardiology |
Abnormally high blood pressure | Hypertension |
Any blood vessel that carries blood from some part of the body back toward the heart | Vein |
The adjective used to describe a heart defect present at birth | Congenital |
Secretes prolactin, oxytocin, and growth hormone | Pituitary gland |
Contains expansion folds called rugae | stomach |
Connect the kidneys to the bladder | ureters |
Sperm are stored here before entering the vas deferens | epididymis |
Part of the brain that coordinates skeletal muscle movement | cerebellum |
Largest and strongest chamber of the heart | left ventricle |
largest artery in the body | aorta |
Tube that elads from the uterus to the exterior of the female body | vagina |
Produces lipase and amylase and secretes insulin | pancreas |
Endocrine gland in teh neck that regulates metabolic rate | thyroid gland |
Connects the larynx to the bronchi | trachea |
This term refers to any region in which organisms interact with their environment. | Ecosystem |
It is the sum total of an organism's utilization of biotic and abiotic resources in its environment. | Niche |
This adjective descrives a lake with high rates of biological producitivity and nutrient cycling. | Eutrophic |
In this type of symbiotic relationship, one organism is helped while the other is unaffected. | Commensalism |
the sister chromatids move to opposite ends of the cell | anaphase |
Chromatin condenses to form chromosomes | prophase |
the chromosomes align themselves on an imaginary line at the center of the cell | metaphase |
two new nuclear envelopes begin to form before a cleavage furrow develops | telophase |
Give the chemical formula for Sodium Chloride | NaCl |
Give the chemical formula for Nitrous Oxide | N2O |
Give the chemical formula for Aluminum Oxide | Al2O3 |
Give the chemical formula for Sodium Nitrate | NaNO3 |
Upper bone of the leg | femur |
Breast bone | sternum |
Collective name for the eight wrist bones | carpals |
Lower jaw bone | mandible |
Name for the first cervical vertibra | atlas |
Upper bone of the arm | humerus |
Bone of the lower arm that points to the little finger | ulna |
Smaller posterior bone of the lower leg | fibula |
The two upper jaw bones | maxillae |
Heel bone | calcaneus |
Name for the last four vertebrae fused together; the tailbone | coccyx |
Moon- Io | Jupiter |
Moon-Titan | Saturn |
Moon-Phobos | Mars |
Triton | Neptune |
The comparison of the density of a mineral to the density of water | specific gravity |
Metallic element in the mineral known as "cinnabar" | Mercury |
The process in which the percentage of a metal in an ore is determined | assaying |
The name of the metallic element in the mineral sphalerite | Zinc |
A lack of clotting factor VIII (8) causes unstoppable bleeding in this disorder. | Hemophilia |
Red blood cells may change shape, causing them to get stuck in caapillaries, in this disease. | Sickle cell |
The lungs and pancreas produce unusually thick mucus that is hard to break up in this disorder. | Cystic fibrosis |
Characterized by a red spot on the retina, this disease causes fatty accumaltions on the nerve cells of the brain, causing blindness, paralysis and then death in young children. | Tay-Sachs |
Disease associated with a woman named MaryMallon | Typhoid Fever |
Disease known as the "kissing disease" | Mononucleosis |
Disease in which the gums become loose around the teeth | Gingivitis |
Condition in which a person binge eats and then purges the food | Bulimia |
Condition caused when fluid pressure builds up in the eye | Glaucoma |
Affliction in which children are socially withdrawn. | Autism |
Term for low blood sugar | Hypoglycemia |
Brief stoppage of breathing while sleeping. | Sleep Apnea |
Virus disease that first appeared in Zaire in 1976. | Ebola |
Swelling of the thyroid gland due to a deficiency in iodine | Goiter |
Common name for Hansen's Disease or Father's Damian Disease | Leporsy |
The tendency of a substance to move down its concentration gradient from an area of greater concentration to an area of lesser concentration. | Diffusion |
A gap between neurons where they communicate with each other | Synapse |
An oxygen-binding protein in muscle cells | Myoglobin |
A phenotype in which both alleles are expressed in a heterozygote | Co-dominant |
He created the first modern periodic table | Dmitri Mendeleev |
These metals are in group 1, the first column of the periodic table | Alkali metals |
These substances zig-zag along a line from boron to polonium. | Metalloids |
This term refers to elements 57 through 71 | lanthanides |
Members of groups 3 to 12 are all classified as this type of metal | transition metals |
These nonmetals are in group 17 of the table | halogens |
Elements 89 to 103 fall under this category | actinides |
These inert substances are in group 18, the last column of the table. | nobel gases |
Group 2 contains this group of somewhat reactive metals | alkaline earth metals |
Term for all elements greater than atomic number 92. | transuranium elements |
Number of periods in the periodic table | 7 |
Winning the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics and the 1962 Nobel Peace Prize, this anti-nuclear weapons advocate is the one of four scientists to ever win two Nobel Prizes | Linus Pauling |
Defined mathematically as the negative logarithm of the concentration of Hydrogen ions, its is the measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a substance | pH |
The name for the anion PO4^+3 | Phosphate |
This is the type of bond that holds together amino acids in proteins | Peptide Bonds |