<p>0.092 was the right answer cause that was the potential energy at the top of the track which should equal the total mechanical energy.</p>
<p>(physics nerd)</p>
<p>0.092 was the right answer cause that was the potential energy at the top of the track which should equal the total mechanical energy.</p>
<p>(physics nerd)</p>
<p>i know .092 was the right answer FOR THE 2ND TO LAST Q.
and the 3RD to last q’s answer was .059. <—what choice was this?</p>
<p>and for the harriet tubman larson q;
i put coauthored because the statement said: "…___ and larson, her first book, and i thought act was testing us on the use of “her” and that its ambiguous.
and if it said that two people did extensive research doesnt it mean that they coauthored it?
but im leaning towards larsons first book choice…
IDK!!</p>
<p>i agree with you…the fact that it was her first book on amazon.com doesn’t matter. Plus “her” WAS ambiguous…how do you know it was referring to Larson?</p>
<p>does anyone have like a compilation of answers for the first passage for the reading part?</p>
<p>i think it mentioned in the question that the person was Larson, so the her would refer to larson</p>
<p>and i saw back on pg 44 about the “she worked” thing in english… that’s right b/c it said “Before she recently retired…” which implies the past tense, and has been working, has worked, and the one already in the sentence had some form of present tense (present progressive and present perfect i believe)… and the only one that was past was “she worked”</p>
<p>It couldn’t be coauthored because the pronoun ‘her’ in ‘her first book’ is singular. The phrase ‘in her first book, blah blah’ was just adding additional information to Larson.</p>
<p>I’m 110% sure the answer is Larson’s first book.</p>
<p>^^ Yeah, because it was a transition from talking about Humez to talking about Larson. Basically it was saying (paraphrased): Humez as well as Larson, in her first book, whateverwhatever, did research about Tubman.
Not coauthored, for sure.</p>
<p>does anyone remember either the starch dialysis questions or the traffic passage, those were the two i struggled with</p>
<p>i kind of remember the starch one and i remember a lot of the traffic/gas molecule passage</p>
<p>just wondering, i know there is a good dispute about co-authoring or first book, those were my choices and i went with co-authored…no particular reason just sounded right. but my question is, are we gonna be able to find out what the right answer actually was. i know that the sat doesn’t tell you which ones you got wrong unless you order the answering service, does the act have a similar service?</p>
<p>thanks</p>
<p>you can order your score report from act and they’ll give you a sheet with your answers and the correct answers for each section on there</p>
<p>wait, so how do you check your score online? and when?</p>
<p>usually the scores come out online officially about 2 to 2 and a half weeks after the test… then there’s the “hack,” which you can find out about from others here</p>
<p>the score report is different… it actually tells you which ones you got wrong and what the right answers are</p>
<p>i also put larson’s first book just because of the “her” and not “their”</p>
<p>anyways for the last reading passage gas molecules or whatever i was rushing but i remember some of the questions and answers i put</p>
<p>“imperfect but sound”
“add more figures to the equation”
something referring to the “unpredictability”
“small things big effects”
“all moving to one lane and slowing down” or somehting along those lines
and there was a question about “speck” and i put it relates to another thing because both allow flow or something to occur…anyone else put this?</p>
<p>and then i didnt answer the last 3 question and just put b/g does anyone remember by any chance the last three answers? much appreciated thankyou</p>
<p>your first 5 seem right… i don’t remember the 6th one, so i can’t say… and i don’t remember the last 3 either</p>
<p>i think that last question about speck is right…its how they both allow something to happen lol i think</p>
<p>really the only reading that gave me trouble was the prose, and based on the answers you all have put, I got most or all of those right (which NEVER happens to me on prose fiction passages).</p>
<p>was the first passage the prose?</p>
<p>yeah, prose is always first</p>
<p>it was the one about that guy on the beach (the odd one…)</p>