Yes. Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
A dot on the number line that represents the location of the number
tenths, i think
You get a multicoloured polka-dot pattern.You get a multicoloured polka-dot pattern.You get a multicoloured polka-dot pattern.You get a multicoloured polka-dot pattern.
Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
Write down 4 rows of 3 dots or 3 rows of 4 dots.
Yes, in a Lewis diagram, the valence electrons are shown by dots around them.
"dot dot dot" is an ellipsis. It means that the number continues in the way shown to infinity. For instance, the decimal 0.33333... which results from 1/3 carries on giving 3s forever. This cannot be written, obviously, so you write the ellipsis instead. This is also true if a pattern is more than just one number, 23/99 gives the decimal 0.232323.... where the dots represent how the 2323 pattern continues forever.
a vector is a line with direction and distance. there is no answer to your question. the dot is the angular relationship between two vectors.
Dot Richardon was number 1
they both show particles but an atomic number is the amount of protons in the nucleus and a dot diagram is to show the bonding of atoms with electrons. and does not show the amount of electrons those atoms have but the valence electrons each atom has
For bonding between atoms we usually show the dot-cross diagram representing the outer most electrons of bonded atoms.
I'm pretty sure that they are to show the number of valence electrons. I hope this helped!
This is the Lewis dot notation.
A filled-in dot on a number line represents that the point is included in the set or interval being represented. It indicates that the value at that point is part of the solution set or range being considered. In interval notation, a filled-in dot is used to show that the endpoint is included in the interval, whereas an open dot is used to indicate that the endpoint is not included.