Hgh
Please clarify what aspect of the can of coke you want to measure: its height, color, albedo, mass, volume, etc.
You do. Probably every day. If you learn basic algebra, you grasp the concept of how quantities of different variables add together to give a total quantity.For example, if you go the cinema and spend £8 or $, on a ticket and 3 bottles of coke and you know the ticket was £5 then it follows that the coke cost £3, and £1 each bottle. Sure you might not write down x:price of coke, and 5 +3x=8, therfore x =1. But the concept is there and if you hadn't done algebra then you wouldn't have that concept. (And don't say that's just addition as it's not-it's actually algebra!)This is only 1 example, there are millions. So next time you hear someone whining about algebra you can explain how they use it in everyday life.
Coke is coal.
coke is hotter than coal
Coke is produced by the distillation of coal.
To convert coal into coke, the coal is burned in an oxygen-depleted environment. When this happens, the impurities of the coal are burnt up but the carbon remains. This is why coke is much lighter than coal.
Frederic M. Stanton has written: 'Methods of analyzing coal and coke' -- subject(s): Coal, Coke, Analysis 'Methods of analyzing coal and coke' -- subject(s): Coal, Coke, Analysis
Coal, Coke, Peat and Paraffin are all fuels.
Coke contains more carbon than coal and hence coke produces more heat
Harold Wesley Jackman has written: 'Coke crushing characteristics' -- subject(s): Coke 'Drying and preheating coals before coking' -- subject(s): Coal, Coke 'Sizing studies on pilot-oven coke, comparison with commercial coke-size' -- subject(s): Coke 'Weathering of Illinois coals during storage' -- subject(s): Coal-weathering, Coal 'Comparison of mine sizes of Southern Illinois coals for use in metallurgical coke' -- subject(s): Coal, Coke 'Preheating coal blends as a means of increasing coke strength' -- subject(s): Coal, Coke, Carbonization
Coke is made by heating coal in the absence of oxygen to about 2000 degrees Fahrenheit. Hard coking coal forms high-strength coke, while soft coking coal produces a lesser quality coke.
Coke is a type of fuel made from coal.
Coke.
Coke is a pure form of carbon and produce very less smoke on burning as compared to coal