A quadratic function will have a degree of two.
degree 1
.
2-2
Yes, any second-degree polynomial is quadratic. Degree 0 - constant (8) Degree 1 - linear (n) Degree 2 - quadratic (n^2) Degree 3 - cubic (n^3) Degree 4 - fourth degree (n^4) Degree 5 - fifth degree (n^5) Degree 6 - sixth degree (n^6) and so on............ Also a degree I find funny is the special name for one hundredth degree. Degree 100 - hectic (n^100)
Allyl Carbocation.
A carbocation refers to a positively charged ion of the carbon atom. A test for carbocation helps in determining its stability.
It is a QUATERNARY carbocation, but very unreactive towards nucleophilic attacks.
Methyl carbocation (CH3+) is isoelectronic with borane (BH3).
A carbocation is formed when a alkane or a alkyl group containing molecule undergoes through a SN1 reaction.
due to hypercongugation
yes. it will
Yes, the organization of carbocation does take place in a Lucas test. Tertiary carbocations are the most stable; while primary carbocations are the most reactive.
An alkanium ion is a carbocation obained by hydrogenation of an alkane.
Stabilization of a carbocation can also be accomplished by reasonance. If the cationic carbon is adjacent to an unsaturated system, the positive charge can be delocalized over adjacent atoms resulting in greater stability of the carbocation. Thus, the carbocations showing resonance are far more stable than those in which the resonance is not flesible.
carbocation is formed as an intermediate so rearrangement is possible
none because it creates a carbocation