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  1. the librarian

    Who is expecting to get spanked by chem?

    Hah, he goes to my school (hey jason, it's waki :) ) and he's kicking us all in chemistry. Pf, 15?
  2. the librarian

    2008 Hsc

    "Explain the contribution of Planck and Einstein to explaining black body radiation." Also explaining how Hertz produced the photoelectric effect and a straightforward E = hf calculation.
  3. the librarian

    Help with 06 HSC question

    From the 06 exam: "During your study of Medical Physics you identified data sources, and gathered, processed and presented information to explain why MRI scans can be used to detect abnormalities in the body. (i) Describe the criteria you would use to determine the reliability of a data...
  4. the librarian

    2008 Hsc

    Westinghouse and AC generators was in there, and Einstein's thought experiment and the relationship between thought and reality (dumbest question *ever*), a lot on Einstein actually... The cathode ray wave/particle debate. There wasn't a single question on semiconductors. It was a pretty easy paper.
  5. the librarian

    Production of NaOH - what order?

    Yeah, that does make more sense. I've got the conquering chemistry textbook, gence the confusion. Thanks!
  6. the librarian

    Production of NaOH - what order?

    I've always thought that the order that the cells were discovered/used in were the diaphragm cell, the mercury cell, then the membrane cell... but the hsc question from 2007 (http://boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/hsc_exams/exam-papers-2007/pdf_doc/chemistry_07.pdf) implies that it was mercury...
  7. the librarian

    practical applications test?

    as in its a test on the "practical applications" of what we're doing. so its not gonna be a straight complex numbers or conics question or whatever, its going to be put in a real life situation or something.
  8. the librarian

    practical applications test?

    what kind of questions could they ask on a practical applications test? considering we've covered complex numbers, polynomials, graphs, integration, conics and volumes by slicing.
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