a mole of subatomic particles, e.g. electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, alpha particlesa mole of atoms of a monatomic element, e.g. carbon, helium, sulphur, gold, plutoniuma mole of molecules of a polyatomic element, e.g. hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, ozone, chlorine, iodine, triiodide iona mole of molecules of a compound, e.g. water, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, vitamin D3, PVC, nitroglycerine, TNTa mole of massive objects, e.g. sand grains, eggs, donuts, bricks, basketballs, bowling ballsIn all cases a mole is the same number of objects (6.02214129E23), regardless of the type, size, or mass of the objects. The mole is analogous in concept to other named unitless quantities, e.g. a dozen (12), a gross (144).
Avogadro's number is the number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.) in one mole of a substance, which is approximately 6.022 x 10^23. Therefore, 1 mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number of representative particles.
No, the mole of solution is not equal to the mole of solute plus the mole of solvent. The mole of solution refers to the total amount of moles in a given volume of solution, which includes both the solute and the solvent.
No, Mark is not a mole.
Mole tape is a specialized type of adhesive tape used in mole trapping. It is designed to be placed over the mole tunnel entrance, leading the mole to surface through the tape where it can be easily captured.
To convert from moles to number of objects, the conversion factor is Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 objects per mole). To convert from number of objects to moles, the conversion factor is the reciprocal of Avogadro's number (1 mole per 6.022 x 10^23 objects).
the mole, pair & dozen are all units which denote a particular number of objects.
mole is the correct answer (apex)
's called a MOLE
a mole of subatomic particles, e.g. electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, alpha particlesa mole of atoms of a monatomic element, e.g. carbon, helium, sulphur, gold, plutoniuma mole of molecules of a polyatomic element, e.g. hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, ozone, chlorine, iodine, triiodide iona mole of molecules of a compound, e.g. water, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, vitamin D3, PVC, nitroglycerine, TNTa mole of massive objects, e.g. sand grains, eggs, donuts, bricks, basketballs, bowling ballsIn all cases a mole is the same number of objects (6.02214129E23), regardless of the type, size, or mass of the objects. The mole is analogous in concept to other named unitless quantities, e.g. a dozen (12), a gross (144).
pokemon are reflections to real animals and/or objects. examples: diglett: mole ninjask: cicada durant: ant
Avogadro's number is the number of atoms in a mole. This is a physical constant, not a mathematical one.
ben critaly from verdin high school in winsfor chesire England and lives at 10 lower hiagh street near doddy is a fkn little gay mole he sent me a message saying that he like me in a agy way ben critaly from verdin high school in winsfor chesire England and lives at 10 lower hiagh street near doddy is a fkn little gay mole he sent me a message saying that he like me in a gay way mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole mole
mole mole mole mole mole mole
Avogadro's number is the number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.) in one mole of a substance, which is approximately 6.022 x 10^23. Therefore, 1 mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number of representative particles.
mole mole mole
No, the mole of solution is not equal to the mole of solute plus the mole of solvent. The mole of solution refers to the total amount of moles in a given volume of solution, which includes both the solute and the solvent.