yes thank u. can u explain to me how the f2 gen has those genotypes tho? because I thought f2 gen is the offspring of the parents--and this question says the parents are both pure bred so two homos RR and WW make 100% codominant RW right? why is the table like that
Can someone please explain this to me? I don't have solutions (for 2022 cssa trial) and I am unsure if my answer is correct. I also don't understand how two pure breeds RR x WW results in those genotypes? Wouln't they all be heterozygotes and then they would not have a 3:1 ratio?
if someone gets 100% in every exam for a subject, but people in the cohort do poorly does this impact them?? im confused how the state rankings work if lots of people get a 100 but only one person comes first
thank you for your reply! i am happy with my other subjects but you just don't know what could happen w 10 units its too risky. i doubt my school even lets people pick up investigating because i dont know anyone who has but i am still going to ask about it
i dont think you can switch subjects because you need to have the hours completed for the prelim course. but i think investigating is an exception to this or smth like that
do u know what other subjects u can pick up in year 12? i only know about picking up investigating science. but i dont think anyone in my school has switched from chem to any subjects they usually just let u drop it
I’m currently in Year 11, and I have 12 units. I’m struggling with chemistry and would like to drop it, but I don’t want to end up with only 10 units in Year 12.
My brother, who is in Year 12 at a different school, dropped chemistry and switched to Investigating Science. The problem is that at...
can someone explain how u know if a graph is many to many or one to one or one to many etc. how do u know by just looking at points?
also for this q I don't understand why B is many to many and C isnt. I was thinking could it be bc if u do line test so if it crosses once for C (hence it is not...
Which digits count?
All non-zero digits (1-9) count.
Zeros between non-zero digits count (e.g 102 has three sig fig).
Leading zeros (zeros before the first non-zero digit) don't count (e.g. 0.0025 has two sig fig).
Trailing zeros (zeros at the end) only count if there's a decimal point (e.g...
Usually, they will choose a few questions in the test where they will mark you down for incorrect significant figures in maths. Chemistry is extremely strict with significant figures. I don't know about physics, but I assume it would be similar to chemistry. My advice for you is to be confident...
If you get 100% on every internal assessment and 100% in the HSC, does that mean you rank first in the state? How come for the state rankers they don't show people tied? I'm sure for most subjects- especially maths, there would be heaps of people who tie.