For the diprotic weak acid H2A, Ka1 = 2.6

For the diprotic weak acid H2A, Ka1 = 2.6

In: Chemistry

Calculate the pH for each of the following cases in the titration of 50.0 mL of...

Calculate the pH for each of the following cases in the titration of 50.0 mL of 0.160 M HClO(aq) with 0.160 M KOH(aq). The ionization constant for HClO is 4.0×10^-8.
(a) before addition of any KOH
pH=
(b) after addition of 25.0 mL of KOH
pH=
(c) after addition of 40.0 mL of KOH
pH=
(d) after addition of 50.0 mL of KOH
pH=
(e) after addition of 60.0 mL of KOH
pH=

In: Chemistry

The wavelength of a nonrelativistic electron is 1.900e-6 m. How fast is it moving? Express your...

The wavelength of a nonrelativistic electron is 1.900e-6 m. How fast is it moving? Express your answer as a fraction of the speed of light, c.

In: Physics

A Jaguar XK8 convertible has an eight-cylinder engine. At the beginning of its compression stroke, one...

A Jaguar XK8 convertible has an eight-cylinder engine. At the beginning of its compression stroke, one of the cylinders contains 491cm3 of air at atmospheric pressure (1.01

In: Physics

You've packed a cube shaped cooler for the beach. Its 6 walls are made of 2...

You've packed a cube shaped cooler for the beach. Its 6 walls are made of 2 centimeter thick styrofoam and have lengths and heights of 40 centimeters each. If you were to fill it with 0 degree ice, how much ice would melt in 2.6 hours if the cooler was sitting in +35 C warm air. (use 0.035 for the k value of styrofoam and 334000 J/kg for the latent heat of fusion for ice.)

In: Physics

One of the main functions of saliva is to buffer against acid from food and plaque,...

One of the main functions of saliva is to buffer against acid from food and plaque, which contributes significantly to the formation of cavities. While there are several buffers in saliva, carbonic acid (H2CO3) has the highest concentration and has the greatest effect on pH.

(a) While the salivary concentration of carbonic acid stays at a fairly constant 1.3 mM, the level of bicarbonate (HCO3-) can vary with the rate that saliva flows from salivary glands. For low flow rates, the bicarbonate concentration is around 2 mM; for medium flow rates, it is 30 mM; and for high flow rates, around 60 mM. The pKa of carbonic acid at body temperature is 6.1. Assuming that the pH of Saliva is determined primarily by carbonic acid and bicarbonate, determine the pH of saliva for each of the three flow rates. The normal pH of saliva is about 6.3.

(b) The most prevalent bacterium in the mouth, streptococcus mutans, breaks down sugar and releases lactic acid (pKa = 3.86). If S. mutans has produced 10^-8 moles of lactic acid since your last swallow, what is the pH of your saliva? What would the pH be without the bicarbonate buffer? Assume that your mouth contains about 1 mL of saliva and that your saliva is flowing at a low rate.

(c) You take a drink of orange juice, and after you swallow, 0.5 mL remains in your mouth. What is the pH of your saliva if your mouth contains 1 mL of pure saliva, and if you model orange juice as 1.0 mM citric acid (pKa = 3.13; assume only one dissociation).

(d) Why do some toothpastes contain baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)?

In: Chemistry

General Instructions Redstone Clayworks, Inc. is located in Sedona, Arizona and manufactures clay fire pits for...

General Instructions

Redstone Clayworks, Inc. is located in Sedona, Arizona and manufactures clay fire pits for patios. They are one of about two dozen firms around the world that manufacture and sell clay fire pits for retailers such as Home Depot, Lowe’s, Front Gate, and other upscale home product chains. There is virtually no product differentiation. A clay fire pit is a clay fire pit.

Assume that the world market demand and supply curves for clay fire pots intersects at $300 per unit.

The spreadsheet below gives some of Redstone’s production cost data. A template for the spreadsheet is provided in the Course Materials.

Q  

  TC  

  TFC  

  TVC

0

         6,000

       6,000

             -  

100

       12,000

       6,000

      6,000

200

       15,000

       6,000

      9,000

300

       21,000

       6,000

    15,000

400

       33,000

       6,000

    27,000

500

       48,000

       6,000

    42,000

600

       65,000

       6,000

    59,000

700

       83,000

       6,000

    77,000

800

     102,000

       6,000

    96,000

900

     123,000

       6,000

117,000

1000

     158,000

       6,000

152,000

Add columns to show, respectively, average fixed cost (AFC), average variable cost (AVC), average total cost (ATC), and short-run marginal cost (SMC). Then, add columns to show, respectively, total revenue (TR), marginal revenue (MR), total profit, average profit, and profit margin.


Place your completed spreadsheet in the Drop Box,and use it to answer questions 1-7. Your spreadsheet and calculations are worth 15 points and count as 500 words toward your word count requirement.

Your spreadsheet must include formulas showing how you arrived at the calculations. As an alternative, you may also submit a document showing your step-by-step calculations for each of the cells. You will not receive credit if you do not show your work using one of these two methods.

For Questions 2, 4, and 5, be sure to employ both of the General Rules for Implementing the Output Decision in your explanations.

A detailed explanation should be given for each question.

In: Economics

If you pay $4 for a call option on JPM stock with an at the money...

If you pay $4 for a call option on JPM stock with an at the money strike price of $100 and at the same time you write a call option with a strike price of $110 for which you receive $1; how much money do you make or lose on the transaction if the stock goes to either $120; $105; or $90?

In: Finance

I need to know how to build a flag in c++ for Italy

I need to know how to build a flag in c++ for Italy

In: Computer Science

identify three concerns of child exploitation investigations regarding effects on the victims and three concerns regarding...

identify three concerns of child exploitation investigations regarding effects on the victims and three concerns regarding the effects on the investigators who conduct these investigations. Identify resources (victim services, trauma therapy, etc) you would have available to respond to the needs of child exploitation victims and investigators as incidents are discovered

In: Nursing

Write a program in python that opens a text file, whose name you enter at the...

Write a program in python that opens a text file, whose name you enter at the keyboard.

•You will be using the file filetext.txt to test your program

•Print out all of the individual, unique words contained in the file, in alphabetical order.

MAKE SURE THAT ALL THE WORDS YOU PRINT OUT ARE IN A SINGLE COLUMN, ONE WORD PER COLUMN!•Print out the number of unique words appearing in text.txt

In: Computer Science

Passage 2 (Questions 8–14) In the first place, to make the poem or the novel the...

Passage 2 (Questions 8–14)

In the first place, to make the poem or the novel the central concern of literary criticism has appeared to mean cutting it loose from its author and from the author’s particular hopes, fears, interests, conflicts, etc. A criticism so limited may seem bloodless and hollow.

In the second place, to emphasize the work seems to involve severing it from those who actually read it, and this severance may seem drastic and therefore disastrous. After all, literature is written to be read.

The formalist critic knows as well as anyone that poems and plays and novels are written as expressions of particular personalities and are written from all sorts of motives–for money, from a desire to express oneself, for the sake of a cause, etc. Moreover, the formalist critic knows as well as anyone that literary works are merely potential until they are read–that is, that they are re-created in the minds of actual readers, who vary enormously in their capabilities, their interests, their prejudices, their ideas. But the formalist critic is concerned primarily with the work itself. Speculation on the mental processes of the author takes the critic away from the work into biography and psychology. Such studies describe the process of composition, not the structure of the thing composed.

On the other hand, exploration of the various readings which the work has received also takes the critic away from the work into psychology and the history of taste. But such work, valuable and necessary as it may be, is to be distinguished from a criticism of the work itself. The formalist critic makes two assumptions: (1) that the relevant part of the author’s intention is what the author actually put into the work–that is, the critic assumes that the author’s intention as realized is the “intention” that counts. And (2) the formalist critic assumes an ideal reader–that is, instead of focusing on the varying spectrum of possible readings, the critic attempts to find a central point of reference from which to focus on the structure of the poem or novel.

There is no ideal reader, of course. But for the purpose of focusing on the poem rather than on the critic’s own reactions, it is a defensible strategy. (The alternatives are desperate: Either we say that one person’s reading is as good as another’s, and thus deny the possibility of any standard reading, or else we take the lowest common denominator of the various readings that have been made–that is, we frankly move from literary criticism into social psychology. To propose taking a consensus of the opinions of “qualified” readers is simply to split the ideal reader into a group of ideal readers.) As consequences of the distinction just referred to, the formalist critic rejects two popular tests for literary value. The first proves the value of the work from the author’s “sincerity” (or the intensity of the author’s feelings as he or she composed it). We discount also such tests as the intensity of the critic’s reaction.

A literary work is a document and as a document can be analyzed in terms of the forces that have produced it, or it may be manipulated as a force in its own right. It mirrors the past, it may influence the future. These facts it would be futile to deny, and I know of no critic who does deny them. But the reduction of a work of literature to its causes does not constitute literary criticism; nor does an estimate of its effects. Good literature is more than effective rhetoric applied to true ideas–even if we could agree upon a philosophical yardstick for measuring the truth of ideas and even if we could find some way that transcended nose counting for determining the effectiveness of the rhetoric.

Material used in this test passage has been adapted from the following source:
C. Brooks, The formalist critic. ©1951 by The Kenyon Review.

The author of the passage probably rejects the use of biography and psychology in literary criticism because these disciplines:

  1. cannot provide any information about literature.
  2. assume that the author’s intention as realized is the only intention that counts.
  3. take into account the entire range of possible readings of a literary work.
  4. focus on the process of literary composition and not on its product.

Solution: The correct answer is D.

  1. The passage author acknowledges that “such work [may be] valuable and necessary”. Implicitly, however, its value and necessity are the responsibility of biographers, historians, and psychologists, not of literary critics (see rationale D).
  2. According to the passage author, it is the formalist critic for whom the intention as realized–i.e., the finished work–is the only relevant consideration. Conversely, it is the proper role of biography and psychology to consider the intention within the author’s mind.
  3. The passage asserts that one alternative to an analysis of the poem itself is that “we take the lowest common denominator of the various readings that have been made–that is, we frankly move from literary criticism into social psychology”. This assertion does not reject psychology (biography is not at issue in this regard) because it might study the effects of literature on readers; it rejects this psychological approach for critics because it “does not constitute literary criticism”.
  4. To use biography in literary criticism would be to consider facts about an author’s life; to use psychology would be to speculate about the inner life of an author or of those who have commented on a literary work. The passage author contends that the application of either of these disciplines to an author is inappropriate for a literary critic because both “describe the process of composition, not the structure of the thing composed”. The argument against a critic’s using psychology to explore the various ways that readers have understood a work is that this investigation, too, “is to be distinguished from a criticism of the work itself”.

I thought B "assume that the author’s intention as realized is the only intention that counts." was the correct answer because in the passage it literally states that the authors intention REALIZED intention is the only intention that counts. The explanation given by AAMC doesnt really make much sense to me.

In: Psychology

1. A mirror of focal length 22.4 cm creates an image with magnification -0.350. What is...

1. A mirror of focal length 22.4 cm creates an image with magnification -0.350. What is the image distance?

2. As light travels between media with different indices of refraction, which of the following wave properties changes: speed, frequency, wavelength?

In: Physics

Explain the Phillips Curve and potential differences between the short-run version and the long-run version. How...

Explain the Phillips Curve and potential differences between the short-run version and the long-run version. How were the economic performance and policies of the country affected by the Phillips Curve in the 1970s, and what eventually happened to break this pattern?

In: Economics

Assignment: What types of legal claims could Patty make against Cash Mart and Geoffrey? Notes: Introduction...

Assignment: What types of legal claims could Patty make against Cash Mart and Geoffrey?

Notes:

Introduction
In this assignment, you’ll need to decide whether Paula Plaintiff has any legal claims arising from a series of unfortunate events. After reading the scenario, answer the questions that follow, making sure to fully explain the basis of your decision.

Paula Plaintiff is shopping at her favorite store, Cash Mart. She is looking for a new laptop, but she can’t find one she likes. Then, realizing that she is going to be late for an appointment, she attempts to leave the store, walking very fast. However, before she can leave, she is stopped by a security guard who accuses her of shoplifting. Paula, who has taken nothing, denies any wrong doing. The officer insists and takes Paula to a small room in the back of the store. The guard tells Paula that if she attempts to leave the room she will be arrested and sent to jail. At this point, the guard leaves the room. Paula is scared and waits in the room for over an hour until the manager comes in and apologizes and tells Paula that she is free to go.

About this same time, Geoffrey Golfer is hitting golf balls in his backyard. Geoffrey decides to break out his new driver and hits a golf ball out of his backyard into the Cash Mart parking lot. The golf ball hits Paula Plaintiff on the head and knocks her unconscious just as she is leaving the store.

Instructions
In a 6–10 paragraph paper, answer the following questions:
What types of legal claims could Paula make against Cash Mart and Geoffrey?
Consider the following:
What are the possible tort claims that Paula can make against Cash Mart? Discuss the elements of the claim and how those elements relate to the facts in the scenario.
Was Geoffrey negligent when he hit the golf ball that injured Paula? Discuss the elements of negligence and use facts from the scenario to support your decision.
If Paula files a negligence claim against Geoffrey will she file in civil court or criminal court? Explain the difference between civil court and criminal court.

This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards. For assistance and information, please refer to the Strayer Writing Standards link in the left-hand menu of your course.

In addition to your textbook, you have access to Nexus Uni through the Strayer University Library. Please take advantage of this excellent legal resource!

The specific course learning outcome associated with this assignment is:

Determine if a plaintiff can make legal claims based on the events in a given scenario.

In: Operations Management