问题 判断题

走廊、楼道等公共区域可以放置,堆积其它杂物。

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参考答案:

问答题

(15分)氮元素的化合物在工农业以及国防科技中用途广泛,但也会对环境造成污染,如地下水中硝酸盐造成的氮污染已成为一个世界性的环境问题。请回答下列问题:

(1)某课题组模拟地下水脱氮过程,利用Fe粉和KNO3溶液反应探究脱氨原理。

①用适量0.1molL-1H2SO4洗涤Fe粉,主要反应的化学方程式为                   ,之后用蒸馏水洗涤铁粉至中性;

②将KNO3溶液的pH调至2.5;

③向②调节pH后的KNO3溶液中持续通入一段时间N2,目的是           

④用足量Fe粉还原③处理后的KNO3溶液。充分反应后,取少量反应液,加入足量NaOH溶液,加热,产生能使湿润红色石蕊试纸变蓝的气体,请根据以上信息写出Fe粉和KNO3溶液反应的离子方程式__。

(2)神舟载人飞船的火箭推进器中常用肼(N2H4)作燃料。NH3与NaClO反应可得到肼(N2H4),该反应中氧化剂与还原剂的物质的量之比为                 。

(3)常温下向含0.01 mol HCl的溶液中缓缓通入224 mLNH3(标准状况,溶液体积变化忽略不计)。

①在通入NH3的过程中,溶液的导电能力   _________ (填“增强”、“减弱”或“基本不变”),理由是           ;水的电离程度         (填“增大”、“减小”或“基本不变”)。

②向HCl和NH3完全反应后的溶液中继续通入NH3,所得溶液中的离子浓度大小关系可能正确的是        (填字母编号)。

a.c(H+)>c(C1-)>c(OH-)>c(NH4+)     b.c(NH4+)>c(C1-)>c(H+)>c(OH-)

c.c(NH4+)>c(H+)>c(C1-)>c(OH-)     d.c(C1)=c(NH4+)>c(H+)=c(OH-)

单项选择题

The marvelous telephone and television network that has now enmeshed the whole world, making all men neighbors, cannot be extended into space. It will never be possible to converse with anyone on another planet. Even with today’s radio equipment, the messages will take minutes—sometimes hours—on their journey, because radio and light waves travel at the same limited speed of 186, 000 miles a second.

Twenty years from now you will be able to listen to a friend on Mars, but the words you hear will have left his mouth at least three minutes earlier, and your reply will take a corresponding time to reach him. In such circumstances, an exchange of verbal messages is possible—but not a conversation.

To a culture which has come to take instantaneous communication for granted, as part of the very structure of civilized life, this "time barrier" may have a profound psychological impact. It will be a perpetual reminder of universal laws and limitations against which not all our technology can ever prevail. For it seems as certain as anything can be that no signal--still less any material object—can ever travel faster than light.

The velocity of light is the ultimate speed limit, being part of the very, structure of space and time. Within the narrow confines of the solar system, it will not handicap us too severely. At the worst, these will amount to twenty hours—the time it takes a radio signal to span the orbit of Pluto, the outer-most planet.

It is when we move out beyond the confines of the solar system that we come face to face with an altogether new order of cosmic reality. Even today, many otherwise educated men—like those savages who can count to three but lump together all numbers beyond four—cannot grasp the profound distinction between solar and stellar space. The first is the space enclosing our neighboring worlds, the planets; the second is that which embraces those distant suns, the stars, and it is literally millions of times greater. There is no such abrupt change of scale in the terrestrial affairs.

Many conservative scientists, appalled by these cosmic gulfs, have denied that they can ever be crossed. Some people never learn ; those who sixty years ago scoffed at the possibility of flight, and ten years ago laughed at the idea of travel to the planets, are now quite sure that the stars will always be beyond our reach. And again they are wrong, for they have failed to grasp the great lesson of our age— that if something is possible in theory, and no fundamental scientific laws oppose its realization, then sooner or later it will be achieved.

One day we shall discover a really efficient means of propelling our space vehicles. Every technical device is always developed to its limit and the ultimate speed for spaceships is the velocity of light. They will never reach that goal, but they will get very near it. And then the nearest star will be less than five years voyaging from the earth.

The author of the passage intends to show()

A. the limitations of our technology

B. the vastness of the cosmic reality

C. the prospect of planetary travel

D. the psychological impact of time and space