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1.23 Since it gas 1 before the decimal point, it is greater than 1, the second number hasn't and so isn't.1.23 Since it gas 1 before the decimal point, it is greater than 1, the second number hasn't and so isn't.1.23 Since it gas 1 before the decimal point, it is greater than 1, the second number hasn't and so isn't.1.23 Since it gas 1 before the decimal point, it is greater than 1, the second number hasn't and so isn't.
If you get 23 mpg, that means that for every gallon of gas, you travel 23 miles. Simply divide the number of miles travelled by the number of miles you travel per gallon of gas. In this case, 10000 miles / 23 mpg = 434.8 gallons.
The amount of gas you put in a car is the input. The input is expended to produce a benefit in the form of an output which in this case is the number of miles traveled with the gas you put in.
The idea is to divide the number of miles by the number of gallons. That gives you a certain number of "miles per gallons".
The Avogadro constant (symbols: L, NA) is the number of "elementary entities" (usually atoms or molecules) in one mole, that is (from the definition of the mole), the number of atoms in exactly 12 grams of carbon-12.[2][3] It was originally called Avogadro's number. The 2006 CODATA recommended value is[1]:The Avogadro constant is named after the early nineteenth century Italian scientist Amedeo Avogadro, who, in 1811, first proposed that the volume of a gas (at a given pressure and temperature) is proportional to the number of atoms or molecules regardless of the nature of the gas.