There are alot of mathematical equations associated with chemistry,
For Example:
differentiation, integration, eigenfunctions and eigenvalues, error analysis, use of simple mathematical equations, such as moles=mass/molar mass, and more complex equations such as the Guggenheim equation, algebra, vectors, matrices
Read more: What_kind_of_math_is_involved_in_chemistry
Chemistry is a science and mathematics is the language of science.
One simple example would be - you need to know how to calculate the quantities of chemicals needed in an experiment to produce expected results.
YES
Modern chemistry or the study of chemistry may be meaningless without math. To work in chemistry today, it is necessary to know exact amounts and combinations, and be able to report those to scientists and to have your results used by people beyond yourself. But chemistry is not meaningless without math. Ancient civilizations or modern 'primitive' civilizations, and even your great grandma used chemistry without the benefit of math by understanding the properties of things around them, how to combine them, how to use them for their effect and producing results. My mom and my grandma would cook and bake without measuring. Native populations devised medicines, paints, metallurgy, leather treatments, etc. without math. There are still plenty of people who know these things and use them. Math is only necessary for chemistry in a professional world.
Math is the language of all science, even biology.
Yes, they are all the different types of science. Math is used in all of those.
urdu math bio physics chemistry english
Chemistry isn't entirely math. The math in chemistry isn't very complicated, it's just understand how to apply the math AND understand some of the key concepts.
I'm good at Math and I passed Chemistry.
You can do Chemistry if you're interested in Chemistry and want to learn something about it. Math has nothing to do with it, one way or the other.
You can do Chemistry if you're interested in Chemistry and want to learn something about it. There's no connection between it and math, in either direction.
yes. because in chemistry u need math skills and good at biology.
Depends on if you have an emphasis in chemistry and what it is. Generally, chemistry, math, physics, and bio.
Not generally true. On the other hand, if you're bad at math you're going to have a TOUGH time with chemistry, and an even worse time with physics. Most of Chemistry and Physics IS math. You'll be fine.
When it comes to the physical sciences like chemistry and physics, math is the "language" of chemistry and physics. You won't need any advanced math in high school or general chemistry, but go into the upper division courses in college and you utilize a lot of calculus. You simply can't do chemistry without math. All physical sciences and math require very similar ways of thinking as well.
I don't know about math, but in physics and chemistry its a deciliter
Of course it does!
Of course not
With their brain