Kelly has a sample of an unknown substance. Which properties of the substance will be the same no matter how large or small her sample is?

(1 point)
Responses

all of these
all of these

melting point, boiling point, and mass
melting point, boiling point, and mass

melting point, boiling point, conductivity, density
melting point, boiling point, conductivity, density

melting point, boiling point, conductivity, solubility, density

The properties of the substance that will be the same no matter how large or small her sample is are the melting point, boiling point, and mass.

The properties of a substance that will be the same no matter how large or small the sample is are its melting point, boiling point, and mass. These properties are intrinsic to the substance and do not depend on the quantity of the sample. Therefore, the correct answer is "melting point, boiling point, and mass."

Melting point, boiling point, and mass will be the same no matter how large or small Kelly's sample of the unknown substance is.

Saturn's largest moon is Titan, shown below. Which of the following statements about Earth and Titan is true?

(1 point)
Responses

There is no gravitational force between Earth and Titan.
There is no gravitational force between Earth and Titan.

The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is more than that between Earth and Saturn.
The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is more than that between Earth and Saturn.

The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is less than that between Earth and Pluto.
The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is less than that between Earth and Pluto.

The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is less than that between Saturn and Titan.

The statement "The gravitational force between Earth and Titan is less than that between Saturn and Titan" is true. The gravitational force between two objects depends on their masses and the distance between them. Since Saturn is much larger than Titan, the gravitational force between Saturn and Titan is much greater than the gravitational force between Earth and Titan.