
(a) Reaction Sequence: 1. CH\(_3\)COOH \( \xrightarrow{\text{SOCl}_2} \) CH\(_3\)COCl: Acetic acid (CH\(_3\)COOH) reacts with thionyl chloride (SOCl\(_2\)) to form acetyl chloride (CH\(_3\)COCl), which is an acyl chloride.
2. CH\(_3\)COCl \( \xrightarrow{H_2, \text{Pd-BaSO}_4} \) CH\(_3\)CH\(_2\)NH\(_2\): The acetyl chloride undergoes a reduction reaction using hydrogen (H\(_2\)) in the presence of a palladium catalyst on barium sulfate (Pd-BaSO\(_4\)) to form ethylamine (CH\(_3\)CH\(_2\)NH\(_2\)).
3. CH\(_3\)CH\(_2\)NH\(_2\) \( \xrightarrow{H_2\text{N-NH}_2} \) C: The ethylamine (CH\(_3\)CH\(_2\)NH\(_2\)) reacts with hydrazine (H\(_2\)N-NH\(_2\)) to form a product C, which is likely a hydrazone or another nitrogen-containing compound.
(b) Reaction Sequence: 1. CH\(_3\)CN \( \xrightarrow{1. \text{DIBAL-H}, 2. H}_2\text{O} \) A: Methyl cyanide (CH\(_3\)CN) reacts with DIBAL-H (diisobutylaluminum hydride) to reduce the nitrile group (CN) to an aldehyde (CH\(_3\)CHO), which is compound A.
2. A \( \xrightarrow{\text{NaOH, heat}} \) B: The aldehyde A undergoes an aldol condensation in the presence of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and heat, forming a product B, which is likely a β-hydroxy aldehyde or ketone.
3. B \( \xrightarrow{C} \) C: The compound B undergoes further reactions, likely a dehydration or other transformation to form the final product C.

Why is chlorobenzene resistant to nucleophilic substitution reactions?
Look at the given image and identify the ancient sculptural panel from the options:
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