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It's called an infinite set.
It is a set which contains a finite number of elements.
I assume you mean a set that contains a single whole number. Yes, you can have sets with zero elements, one element, two elements, etc.; so a set which contains a single number is perfectly valid.
N : Numbers which are greater than 0(1,2,3...) are known as natural number sets. Number sets which contains 0(eg 0,1,2,3...) are whole numbers.
The five axioms, or postulates proposed by Peano are for the set of natural numbers: not real numbers. They are:Zero is a natural number.Every natural number has a successor in the natural numbers.Zero is not the successor of any natural number.If the successor of two natural numbers is the same, then the two original numbers are the same.If a set contains zero and the successor of every number is in the set, then the set contains the natural numbers.
It's called an infinite set.
The elements a compound contains and the exact number of atoms of each element in one unit of that compound is referred to as the chemical formula of the compound.
The columns of elements on the periodic table are called groups. Each group contains elements with similar chemical properties due to their shared number of electrons in the outermost energy level.
It contains the symbols, atomic number, atomic name and the real name of the elements.
The Periodic Table contains all the known elements and information about each of the elements, such as atomic number, atomic mass, group, period and symbol.
The elements in the periodic table are arranged by increasing atomic number, which is the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom. This arrangement helps group elements with similar properties into columns called groups or families, and elements with the same number of electron shells into rows called periods.
In mathematics, a finite set is a set that has a finite number of elements. For example, (2,4,6,8,10) is a finite set with five elements. The number of elements of a finite set is a natural number (non-negative integer), and is called the cardinality of the set. A set that is not finite is called infinite. For example, the set of all positive integers is infinite: (1,2,3,4, . . .)
It is a set which contains a finite number of elements.
Now all the elements from hydrogen to plutonium are considered natural chemical elements - a total of 94 elements.
I assume you mean a set that contains a single whole number. Yes, you can have sets with zero elements, one element, two elements, etc.; so a set which contains a single number is perfectly valid.
Whole numbers are usually defined as the number 0,1,2,3,4,5,6.... where "...." means it goes on forever. These are the natural numbers with the number 0 added to them. So the natural numbers are 1,2,3,4,5,6...The integers are all the whole number and all the negatives of the natural numbers....-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,4...So every whole number is an integer.Every natural number is an integer.Every integer is NOT a whole number. ( look at -2)Every integer is NOT a natural number. ( look at -3)The set of integers contains the set of natural numbers and contains the set of whole numbers.The set of whole numbers contains the set of natural numbers.
The total number of elements in the formula C6H12 is 2 (carbon and hydrogen).