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Green Fort
Heavy on science and econ with mixed in lit
Question | Answer |
---|---|
name the technique performed with a burette which is used to find a solution’s concentration | Titration |
name the test for detecting metals, in which strontium solutions turn red and sodium solutions turn yellow when subjected to this test | flame test |
name this lab technique that separates two substances by boiling one of them off, often used to desalinate water | Distillation |
calculates the heat or enthalpy change of a chemical or physical process by using specialized vessels to measure a change in temperature. Essentially, measures a system's heat change | Calorimetry |
separates a complex mixture into its individual components, involves two components: a mobile phase, which moves, and a stationary phase, which interacts differently with different components of the mobile phase to produce a separation. | Chromatography |
These devices are represented on circuit diagrams by a jagged line and a four colored band system indicates their strengths in Ohms. Name these devices that impede the flow of current in a circuit. | Resistor |
These generally include an insulator called a dielectric between two conductors. Their common measurement is charge divided by electric potential difference. Name these devices whose strength is measured in farads and store charge. | Capacitor |
Name this circuit element, whose namesake property is measured in Henries, and which stores energy in a magnetic field. Namesake property symbolized L | Inductor |
Name these alternating circuit components containing a pair of inductively-coupled coils that steps down or steps up an input voltage. These devices transfer electrical energy from one AC circuit to another using induction. | Transformer |
name this circuit element which allows current to flow through in only one direction, whose "light-emitting" variant is used in modern light bulbs. | Diode |
This experiment contradicted the corpuscular theory of light by proving its wave-particle duality. This experiment showed that waves can behave like particles. This experiment that used the namesake structure to observe the wave-particle duality of light. | Thomas Young’s double-slit experiment |
Experiment disproved the existence of the luminiferous aether. The apparatus was rotated so that the interference pattern would have changed if the light was traveling through ether, not the case. Name this experiment, which used an interferometer. | Michelson-Morley experiment |
Parallel voltage plates created a uniform electric field and the voltage was adjusted to the level necessary to cause the particle to suspend in air. Name this 1909 experiment which measured the charge of the electron, performed by Robert Millikan. | oil-drop experiment |
An alpha particle was shot at namesake material in this experiment. Most particles passed through with no deflection, but about 1 in 2000 were deflected more than 90 degrees. Verified the existence of the positively charged atomic nucleus. | Rutherford gold foil experiment |
Scientist (and fiar) who studied genetics using pea plants | Gregor Mendel |
Using an electrical spark to simulate lightning and producing organic compounds from hydrogen, ammonia, water, and methane, name this 1952 experiment which demonstrated the feasibility of abiogenesis on an early Earth | Miller-Urey experiment |
This experiment eliminated the dispersive and conservative hypotheses, instead supporting the semiconservative model. Proved that each new DNA molecule in replication consisted of one strand from the original helix and one new strand | Meselson-Stahl experiment |
Author of An Inquiry into the nature and causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776) and the creator of the metaphor of the “invisible hand.” This work more-or-less single-handedly founded the Classical school of economics | Adam Smith |
Chicago school economist who founded monetarism (a revision of the quantity theory of money) in works like A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960 (1963). Conservative and laissez-faire government policy. Author of Capitalism and Freedom | Milton Friedman |
illustrated international trade using Portuguese wine and English cloth. Name this author of Principles of Political Economy and Taxation who formulated the theory of comparative advantage. | David Ricardo |
Economist: governments should invest in public schools, eliminate poverty, and create a "New Class" of workers, production in modern economies is preserved by "conventional wisdom." Author of The Affluent Society and The New Industrial State | John Kenneth Galbraith (Note: he is Canadian-American, some questions say he is American. Some Canadian. He is both.) |
Built on ideas of Jeremy Bentham. English thinker, author of Utilitarianism and On Liberty | John Stuart Mill |
“command central” of the cell contains almost all of the cell’s DNA, which appears as chromatin through most of cell cycle, but condenses to form chromosomes during mitosis. Within there are dense bodies called nucleoli, which contain ribosomal RNA. | Nucleus |
the machines that coordinate protein synthesis (translation). They consist of several RNA and protein molecules arranged into two subunits. These organelles read the messenger RNA copy of the DNA & assemble the appropriate amino acids into protein chains. | Ribosomes |
Stock Clue Organelle: flippases | cell/plasma membrane |
Stock Clue Organelle: integrins | cell/plasma membrane |
Stock Clue Organelle: tic, toc proteins | chloroplast |
Stock Clue Organelle: b6f complex | chloroplast |
Stock Clue Organelle: sarcoplasmic, KDEL, glucose-6-phosphatase | ER |
Stock Clue Organelle: 9 plus 2; type III secretion systems; basal bodies | Flagella |
Stock Clue Organelle: Tay-Sachs disease, Hexosaminidase A, Pompe's disease | Lysosome |
Stock Clue Organelle: Leigh's disease, Leber's optic neuropathy, cristae | mitochondria |
Stock Clue Organelle: Cajal bodies, snRNP proteins | Nucleus |
Stock Clue Organelle: Zellweger syndrome, plasmalogen synthesis, refsum disease, C-terminal | Peroxisome |
Author of Our Town | Thorton Wilder |
Author Long Day’s Journey Into Night | Eugene O'Neill |
Author Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf | Edward Albee |
Author A Streetcar Named Desire | Tennessee Williams |
Author A Raisin in the Sun | Lorraine Hansberry |
Author The Crucible | Arthur Miller |
Author Death of a Salesman | Arthur Miller |
Author Mourning Becomes Electra | Eugene O'Neill |
Author The Glass Menagerie | Tennessee Williams |
Author The Iceman Cometh | Eugene O'Neill |
Author Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Tennessee Williams |
Major Character is Willy Loman (name play) | Death of a Salesman |
Major Character are Blance DuBois and Stanley Kowalski (name play) | A Streetcar Named Desire |
Major Character is Elizabeth Proctor (name play) | The Crucible |
Author of The Little Foxes | Lillian Hellman |
Major character of Things Fall Apart | Okonkwo |
The novel Things Fall Apart takes place in | Umuofia |