As far as I can determine, it is the largest magnitude constant.
6.02*10^23atoms (avogadros constant)
A mole.
ONE(1) mole. 6.022 x 10^(23) is the Avogadro Number. Which is a constant for the number of atoms of any element in one mole. So for Neon(Ne) the number represents one mole of neon atoms.
Its avogadros number
No.
I asked this question wrong. It should be Avogadros Number. Sorry!
atoms in 12 g of c-12
The unit is "per mole", or mol^-1.
It is 6.02 (times) 10 to the power of 23
It is the number of fundamental particles - atoms or molecules - of a substance in 1 mole of that substance.
Avogadro's number is a constant (6.022 x 10^23) that represents the number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.) in one mole of a substance. It is used to convert between the mass of a substance and the number of particles it contains.
A mole of carbon is approximately 6.022 x 10^23 carbon atoms, which is Avogadro's number. This quantity is used in chemistry to easily measure the amount of a substance on a macroscopic scale.