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BTGmoderatorDC
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Whorfian tubules have an inside diameter equal to their length, a density half that of water, and a mass that is immeasurably small. A physicist isolated an entity less dense than water, with insufficient mass to measure, and a length exactly equal to the diameter of its inside.
It would be certain that the physicist had isolated a Whorfian tubule if it were concluded by the physicist that
A. the physicist had been looking specifically for Whorfian tubules
B. Whorfian tubules are the only entities of immeasurably small mass with an inside diameter equal to their length
C. the density of what he had isolated was exactly half that of water
D. Whorfian tubules are only found under the conditions that the physicist had duplicated
E. Whorfian tubules were the only entities half the density of water with an immeasurably small mass
Can some experts explain the best option?
OA B
It would be certain that the physicist had isolated a Whorfian tubule if it were concluded by the physicist that
A. the physicist had been looking specifically for Whorfian tubules
B. Whorfian tubules are the only entities of immeasurably small mass with an inside diameter equal to their length
C. the density of what he had isolated was exactly half that of water
D. Whorfian tubules are only found under the conditions that the physicist had duplicated
E. Whorfian tubules were the only entities half the density of water with an immeasurably small mass
Can some experts explain the best option?
OA B












