None. A line is a 1-dimensional object and so has no thickness. An atom, no matter how small, has a finite thickness and so cannot be IN a line.
If we assume that the distance between each atom is about 1 Angstrom (1×10−10m) apart, we can calculate that there are approximately 100,000,000 atoms in a 1cm line, give or take depending on the size of the atom.
4 cm * 4 cm = 16 sq cm
16.2 cm is 6.37795276 inches!
2
None. A line is a 1-dimensional object and so has no thickness. An atom, no matter how small, has a finite thickness and so cannot be IN a line.
If we assume that the distance between each atom is about 1 Angstrom (1×10−10m) apart, we can calculate that there are approximately 100,000,000 atoms in a 1cm line, give or take depending on the size of the atom.
6 cm
It would depend on the type of atom. Atoms of different elements come in different sizes. We can take an average of about 1 angstrom, that is 10^-10 meters or 10^-8 cm. Using that average you would need 10^8 atoms.
4 cm * 4 cm = 16 sq cm
16.2 cm is 6.37795276 inches!
2
It depends on how thick the line is.
There are approximately 5 x 10^22 silicon atoms in 1 cm^3 of material.
The cgs unit of displacement is the centimeter (cm). It represents a distance along a straight line in the cgs (centimeter-gram-second) system of units.
50
There are approximately 2.42 x 10^22 atoms in 1 cm^3 of carbon, assuming a density of 2.26 g/cm^3 and an atomic weight of 12.011 g/mol for carbon.