bhaiiiii Posted September 13, 2005 Posted September 13, 2005 hey guys, i need some help for this chemistry question i have a topic which is:"the importance of the heat capacity of water to aquatic life" i have found information and diagrams but i need a GRAPH, this graph must somehow relate to my topic, thus it must have something to do with aquatic life. if any of you guys could find some data in a table, i would be very thankfull thus i could use the table to make a graph. thnaks again!
DQW Posted September 13, 2005 Posted September 13, 2005 I have to say this is the most ridiculous question (requiring that you "throw in a graph") I've come across in a while. But in any case, something that may come close is the solubility of oxygen in water as a function of temperature.
j_p Posted September 13, 2005 Posted September 13, 2005 How about how the rate of temperature change of water in response to change in air temperature? And the rate of temperature as a function of depth? Or heat capacity as a function of salination in estuaries? Both of these would relate to niche survival strategies. Maybe the point of the requirement is to make the student think one step further; after all, is it really science if one can't find something to graph?
bhaiiiii Posted September 14, 2005 Author Posted September 14, 2005 guys, i think that its a really good idea, and i thank you for it, but the main way for me to get the marks is through raw data, i.e. a actual table of data. thus using this i can derive a graph, but i am having trouble with it. thanks guys AND also i need specific diagrams that relate to my topic
bhaiiiii Posted September 14, 2005 Author Posted September 14, 2005 guys, im starting to doubt my topic, i neeeed a topic that has a chemical equation (i.e. reactants and products), a well integrated graph and raw data. i was thinking about "the importance of the density of ice to aquatic life"
ecoli Posted September 14, 2005 Posted September 14, 2005 how about Carbonate dilution in relation to water depth. That could be interesting, because you could through in a graph of the Carbonate dilution (markied with the Critial Carbon Compensation depth). Such graph is easily available off the Internet. And you have the whole precipitation reactions in their too.
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