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Biology; Chemistry; Physics: Post your doubts here!

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Guidelines for magnification and drawing a large diagram; anyone?
Take all lengths in mm. Before making the drawing, measure the length and width of the image, suppose it's 30mm, make it approx. 60 in your drawing. You may draw a line of symmetry and then draw, easier way fore people who are not good at drawing like me. Don't shade anything, label clearly. That's it.
 
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Take all lengths in mm. Before making the drawing, measure the length and width of the image, suppose it's 30mm, make it approx. 60 in your drawing. You may draw a line of symmetry and then draw, easier way fore people who are not good at drawing like me. Don't shade anything, label clearly. That's it.
We also have to enter final magnification if the image is already magnified e.g it is magnified X2000 and we make a drawing 1.5 times that so we will write x3000 in the end for our magnification
 
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(a) i That much of accuracy is not required as the rest of the values have also been calculated to only 2 decimal places
(a) ii One student drops the cup from a height above the ground, giving a signal when he releases it, and the other times it

(f) Due to the weight increasing, the effect of air resistance is decreasing

(3) c The test tube is being heated for 15 min, and we are measuring temp change for 20 min. So just draw a graph that shows temp increase to 90 and then decrease to room temp.
 
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