octahedral
noncoplaner
Basic geometry terms are lines, points segments and rays, so it should be "point".
q p r s t u v w x y z are the alphabets for logic branch of mathematics in fact logic and geometry help each other a lot
Geometry can be used in basketball to calculate the exact angle and distance you need to shoot the ball to get it into the hoop. But without a protractor and measuring tape it's practically useless. :P
Yes, PCl6 is a polar molecule. While the individual P-Cl bonds are polar due to the electronegativity difference between phosphorus and chlorine, the overall molecular geometry of PCl6 (octahedral) results in a net dipole moment, making it a polar molecule.
The bond angle for PCl6- (hexachlorophosphate ion) is approximately 90 degrees due to its octahedral geometry, where the central phosphorus atom is surrounded by six chlorine atoms.
In the solid state, PCl5 adopts a crystal lattice structure consisting of PCl4+ and PCl6- ions. The PCl4+ ions consist of a central phosphorus atom surrounded by four chlorine atoms, with a distorted tetrahedral geometry. The PCl6- ions consist of a central phosphorus atom surrounded by six chlorine atoms in a trigonal bipyramidal geometry.
PCl6- is a nonpolar molecule. This is because the molecule has an octahedral geometry with six identical P-Cl bonds arranged symmetrically around the central phosphorus atom. The electronegativity difference between phosphorus and chlorine is not significant enough to create a dipole moment, resulting in a nonpolar molecule.
n[p
~e → p
Phosphorus in PCl6 uses sp3d2 hybrid orbitals, which involve one 3s orbital, three 3p orbitals, and two 3d orbitals. This hybridization allows phosphorus to form six sigma bonds with the six chlorine atoms in PCl6.
octahedral
parallelogramperimeterpentagonprismproofprotractorPythagorean Theorem
A conditional statement is much like the transitive property in geometry, meaning if: P>Q and ~N>P then you can conclude: if ~N>Q
Law of Detachment states if p→q is true and p is true, then q must be true. p→q p therefore, q Ex: If Charlie is a sophomore (p), then he takes Geometry(q). Charlie is a sophomore (p). Conclusion: Charlie takes Geometry(q).
No. You have to solve it by logic. p: