Dissolving Solids: Can They Be Reformed?

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Dissolving solids involves understanding solubility and equilibrium, where a solid can either dissolve or remain undissolved. The solubility product constant (Ksp) quantifies the equilibrium concentrations of the dissolved ions. Factors such as temperature and concentration influence whether a solid will dissolve or reform. The discussion highlights the importance of Ksp in determining solubility behavior. Overall, the topic revolves around the reversible nature of dissolving solids and their equilibrium states.
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I would type the problem but it's really long. I just need to know what the two different results are for dissolving solids because I completely forgot. I think it has to do with if you can bring them back or not ?
 
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Are you asking about diffusion or solubility? It seems like you know what you are searching for better than we do, try google or wikipedia.
 
I'm talking about solubilty. I've tried to look it up but i can't find any thing.
 
Well every substance has a "Ksp" called the solubility which is the product of the concentrations of the products at equilibrium. Most substances will dissolve then go back to solid and redissolve, and based on different factors like temp, conc. of reactants, etc. they will reach a state of equilibrium, the values for the products at this point are the ksp.

For example

Take the Reaction
aX -> Ca+ + Dx-

[a+]^C[x-]^D = Ksp(solubility product) for compound aX

Does that shed any light on this question? I think this is probably posted in the wrong area.
 
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Ok, well, I think the wikipedia link helped a little bit. Thanks any way.
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
TL;DR Summary: I came across this question from a Sri Lankan A-level textbook. Question - An ice cube with a length of 10 cm is immersed in water at 0 °C. An observer observes the ice cube from the water, and it seems to be 7.75 cm long. If the refractive index of water is 4/3, find the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. I could not understand how the apparent height of the ice cube in the water depends on the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. Does anyone have an...
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