Which Descriptions Represent the Law of Multiple Proportions in Atoms X and Y?

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The discussion centers on the application of the law of multiple proportions, which states that when two elements form multiple compounds, the ratios of the weights of the second element that combine with a fixed mass of the first will be small whole numbers. In the context of the provided scenarios, descriptions II and III are identified as valid representations of this law. Description II features a ratio of 1 X atom to 3 Y atoms, while description III has a ratio of 1 X atom to 2 Y atoms. The ratios derived from these observations (2:3) confirm the whole number relationship required by the law. Description IV does not fit the criteria as it involves diatomic molecules, which complicates the mass ratio analysis. Therefore, the correct answer is option d, which includes only descriptions II and III. The question's composition is noted as unclear, but the reasoning aligns with the principles of the law of multiple proportions.
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If X and Y represent atoms of different elements, as described in I, which descriptions II - IV represent the law of multiple proportions?

I: 4 X atoms and 12 Y atoms are spotted

II: 4 molecules; each are comprised of 1 X atom and 3 Y atoms
III: 4 molecules; each are comprised of 1 X atom and 2 Y atoms
IV: 2 sets of diatomic molecules are spotted; 2 diatomic molecules of X and 6 diatomic molecules of Y

a. only descriptions II and IV
b. descriptions II, III, IV
c. only descriptions III and IV
d. only descriptions II and III

Is the correct choice d. II and III? (Am I supposed to look at the numbers of element to determine if the mass ratios are whole numbers of each other?)

Thanks.
 
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first, state the law of multiple proportions
 
"If two elements form more than one compound between them, then the the ratios of the weights of the second element which combine with a fixed mass of the first element will be ratios of small whole numbers."
 
This is a terribly composed question, but I think you have the correct answer. If you first observe X:Y = 1:2 and then observe X:Y = 1:3, that gives you Y/X(1st obs):Y/X(2nd obs) = 2:3, a simple whole number ratio.
 
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