When pressurizing a system with nitrogen you should;

Questions

When pressurizing а system with nitrоgen yоu shоuld;

Priscillа, а cоllege student mаjоring in chemistry, jоined her college’s Environmental Movement club and quickly formed close friendships with two members: Ravinder (Rav) and Kelsey.   Priscilla soon learned that both were very passionate about saving the earth from what they believed was impending doom.  Rav and Kelsey would often wax poetic about “eco-warriors” who engaged in eco-terrorism acts. Priscilla joined Rav and Kelsey for several protests on campus.  The protests started as mere picketing outside of campus buildings, but got more aggressive in nature, such as “sit-ins” in classrooms during times when classes were supposed to meet, and then occupying an administrative building on campus for two days.  Subsequently, after learning that ExxonMobil was one of the college’s biggest donors, Priscilla, Rav, and Kelsey went to the college president’s residence in the middle of the night and spray-painted “Exxon’s whore!” on the president’s car.  This last incident garnered a lot of media attention, as they had hoped. The night after vandalizing the president’s car, Priscilla hung out with Kelsey and Rav at their 3rd-floor apartment. They reminisced about the incident and Priscilla said it was the craziest thing she had ever done.  Rav replied, “Oh, we’re just getting started! We’re planning something really big. Let’s just call it, uh, ‘major vandalism,'” followed by Kelsey making a rocket-sounding sound while expanding her arms outward, as if drawing a circle with her hands.  Priscilla said she supported any actions that Rav and Kelsey partake in that help bring more attention to environmental issues, but that she drew the line of personal involvement with spray-paint vandalism.  Kelsey said, “That’s cool, we respect that.  We’ll keep you out of the loop of this next one then.”  The conversation then turned to normal things that college kids talk about. Or something like that. Yeah, college stuff. A week later, Kelsey called Priscilla and said, “It’s best that I don’t get into details, but something happened and we need to store some stuff in our apartment somewhere else for a bit.  Would we be able to keep it at your place?”  Priscilla agreed and then Kelsey and Rav immediately drove over to Priscilla’s place, which was an off-campus house that she shared with nine other students.   They arrived with three boxes and Priscilla helped them carry one of the boxes into the house.  Priscilla noticed that the bottom of the cardboard box she was carrying was damp.  “Is something leaking in here?” she asked.  Rav responded, “Oh, that one was in the basement; it flooded a bit when it rained the other day. It’s probably still damp from that.”  Through a tiny crevice where the top of the box was taped closed with clear tape, Priscilla could barely make out what looked like red cylindrical objects, but she never opened the box before stowing it away in her closet.  She then washed her hands in the bathroom because they were oily from touching the bottom of the box. A few days later, while leaving class, Priscilla got a frantic phone call from one of her housemates. The housemate told her that there had been an explosion in their house and that two of their other housemates were dead.  It turned out that there was dynamite in the box that Priscilla had carried into her house and stored in the closet.  Further, the dynamite had been “sweating”—meaning that nitroglycerin liquid was seeping out of the dynamite.  This often happens with old dynamite and it is an indicator that the dynamite has become very unstable and thus very dangerous; something as little as slight jostling or a bit of static electricity could cause the dynamite to explode. Later on, investigators—after seizing Priscilla’s laptop—went through Priscilla’s search history and found search terms like “nitroglycerin consistency” and “what does nitroglycerin feel like.” Rav and Kelsey were arrested and indicted for several crimes after investigators discovered evidence of a plan to bomb one of Chevron’s (oil company) regional offices. You are an assistant prosecutor asked to look into whether to bring charges against Priscilla for: (1) violation of the following two statutes listed below; and 4.11(b) – whoever knowingly provides material resources or conceals or disguises the nature, location, source, or ownership of material resources that are to be used in preparation for, or in carrying out, an act of terrorism, shall be guilty of a class A felony. Definitions: Terrorism. A violent act intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population. 4.24(a) – it is illegal to possess, store, transport … explosive materials without an explosives license or permit. Violation of this statute is a class A felony. (The statute’s list of “explosive materials” includes nitroglycerin).  (2) any other crimes that the district attorney could potentially bring against Priscilla. Though a common-law jurisdiction, the jurisdiction follows the MPC in regard to mens rea requirements for criminal statutes. Assume that you (the assistant prosecutor) have evidence of all of the aforementioned facts through investigations and interviews with Rav, Kelsey, and Priscilla.  And stay within the scope of the course content.  I do not want you to discuss any crimes you might be familiar with that Priscilla plausibly committed but that we did not cover. Discuss fully.