Atoms correspond in that they are all made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons. However, they differ in their mass numbers, which is the sum of protons and neutrons. Atoms of different elements have different mass numbers due to varying numbers of protons and neutrons.
These two atoms are isotopes of each other. They have the same atomic number (protons) but different mass numbers due to their different numbers of neutrons. This means they will differ in terms of stability and possibly some properties, but they will have the same charge and occupy the same position on the periodic table.
The numbers placed immediately before formulas of compounds and/or elements involved in the reaction are called "coefficients" and those placed immediately after element symbols, depressed below the typographical line of the element symbol are called "subscripts". The subscripts show the number of atoms of a particular element in a formula unit of a molecule or other compound.
When sodium reacts, it forms sodium oxide (Na2O) by reacting with oxygen from the air. This reaction involves one atom of sodium reacting with one molecule of oxygen to produce two atoms of sodium and one molecule of oxygen combined as sodium oxide.
The formula 2H2O is balanced in terms of the number of atoms of each element present. It represents two molecules of water, with a total of 2 atoms of hydrogen and 2 atoms of oxygen.
All lithium atoms will have the same number of protons (3) but can have different numbers of neutrons, resulting in different isotopes of lithium. Electrons are the same for a neutral lithium atom (3 electrons), but ions of lithium can have a different number of electrons.
because
The three forms of a Prolog term are atoms, numbers, and compound terms. Atoms are constants or names, numbers can be integers or floating-point numbers, and compound terms are expressions that combine other terms using functors and parentheses.
How are elements described in terms of their atoms
No. Some may have different numbers of neutrons. Atoms of the same element (atoms with the same number of protons in the nucleus) may have different numbers of neutrons, and so will have different masses. As an example, chlorine is a mixture of different isotopes with some of the atoms having different neutrons numbers.
the numbers in a ratio called TERMS
These two atoms are isotopes of each other. They have the same atomic number (protons) but different mass numbers due to their different numbers of neutrons. This means they will differ in terms of stability and possibly some properties, but they will have the same charge and occupy the same position on the periodic table.
well, oxygen atoms have only 2.
2/9 in terms of atoms.
Undefined terms are numbers that con't be determined, like 1/0. Not to be confused with irrational numbers, though.
It seems there might be a misunderstanding, as you can't have a fraction of an atom in the physical sense. Atoms are discrete particles, so you can have whole numbers of tungsten atoms (e.g., 1, 2, 3, etc.), but not 2.251022. If you meant to ask about a quantity of tungsten in terms of moles, you could convert it using Avogadro's number (approximately (6.022 \times 10^{23}) atoms per mole) to find how many moles correspond to that number of atoms.
In simplistic terms YES!!!.
Particles and atoms are not the same in terms of their composition and structure. Atoms are the basic building blocks of matter, consisting of a nucleus made up of protons and neutrons, surrounded by electrons. Particles, on the other hand, refer to subatomic particles such as protons, neutrons, and electrons that make up atoms. So, while particles are components of atoms, they are not the same as atoms themselves.