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Au(s) | Au+(aq) Al3+(aq) | Al(s)(-_^)
Type your answer here... Al(s) | Al3+(aq) Mg2+ (aq) | Mg(s)
The answer depends on what aspect of the human white blood cell you are referring to: their number in an average person, their mass, radius, volume, etc.
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
Scientific notation is a way to express numbers that are either very small or very large. In traditional notation the first kind would have a lot of 0s between the decimal point and the first significant figure whereas the second kind would have a large number of trailing 0s. The need for scientific notation arose from advances in various branches of science: atomic particles in physics or chemistry, astronomical or cosmological distances, size of single cell animals. Nowadays, even non-scientific values such as population, national debts (of some countries) could usefully utilize scientific notation.
The scientific notation for a human red blood cell with a diameter of 0.000008 would be 8 x 10^-6 meters.
The size of the plant cell in scientific notation is 1.276 x 10^-5 meters.
The scientific notation of a red blood cell with a diameter of 0.0000075 units is 7.5 x 10^-6 units.
The relationship between optical density and bacterial cell count can vary depending on the species, growth phase, and experimental conditions. Therefore, it is not possible to directly equate one optical density reading to a specific number of bacterial cells without calibration against a known standard or a standard curve.
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
It is 7.6*10^-3 unspecified units.
Mg(s) | Mg2+(aq)Au+(aq) | Au(s)
Mg(s) | Mg2+(aq)Au+(aq) | Au(s)
Al | Al^3+ Zn^2+ | Zn
Al(s) | Al3+(aq) Ni2+(aq) | Ni(s)
Zn(s)/Zn2+(aq)//Au+(aq)/Au(s)
Mg(s) | Mg2+(aq) Au+(aq) | Au(s)