Chemistry
@Allison
B................? @Shadow
We are doing a conversion of kg to g, so our end result from the expression should be in grams. For answer B, our end result would be in kilograms, as grams would cancel out.
So A.
@Shadow xD I don't knoww.
A or C.
I’m confused @Shadow
Where is the confusion? c;
*pulls up a map* everywhere.
Lmao
Well, we have four possible destinations. We just need to see which one is right for us. As I said earlier, we want our end result to be in grams, not kilograms. Therefore, for any possible destinations with an end result of kilograms, we can exclude. That would be B and C, as they come out as kg.
But it's one answer ._.
Just say the answer, it ain't gonna hurt. You wouldn't be giving out a direct answer since you already explained.
Yes, we have two remaining destinations to decide between. Remember that 1kg = 1000 grams Therefore we should have kg, multiplying by grams \[\frac{ kilogram }{ 1 } \times \frac{ grams }{ kilogram }\]
So b?
Look at the expression, and at the two remaining possible destinations of A and D. Which one matches up in regards to units (kilograms and grams).
A
@Warriorz13 What do you think?
No idea to be honest..
It's A.
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