I Have A Mole That Hurts How Big Is A Mole? Help Me Put Moles In Perspective, Like How Much Space Would A Mole Of Bowling Ball Occupy?

How big is a mole? Help me put moles in perspective, like how much space would a mole of bowling ball occupy? - i have a mole that hurts

How big is a mole? Help me to relativize the moon as a space that would hold a mole of bowling ball? How many times per mole of 5 people stacked head to toe walking distance around the earth?

Be found Can you show dimensional analysis, that he received the answer, thank you for your assistance in use!

6 comments:

Pommac said...

4 moles would be needed to fill a cup of coffee.

gp4rts said...

A mole is Avogadro's number of molecules. In other words, ~ 6 * 10 ^ 23 molecules. When the balls in cubic packing of 1 m in diameter, then Cubert (600 are) * 10 ^ 7 balls into a side of the moon, and fill a bucket with 8.4 * 10 ^ 7 m on one side or 15,900 miles on one side.

One mole of 5 meters from end to end is 30 * 10 ^ 23 m long. The extent of the earth in Ecuador is 2 * π * 4000 miles, or 1.3 * 10 ^ 8 meters, the number of times it will be 30 * 10 ^ 23 / 1.3 * 10 ^ 8 = 2.3 * 10 ^ accessed 16 times.

ajay said...

Avogadro's number is often closer to 6.02 x 10 ^ 23. Logarithmically, almost 10 ^ 24, or a cube of 10 ^ 8 (one hundred million) each side has a volume of a mole.

To be more precise, 1 mol = 0.602x10 ^ 24th The cube root of 0.602 is 0.844, ie 1 mol = (0.844x10 ^ 8) ^ 3 =
(8.44x10 ^ 7) ^ 3 = 84.4 million was at a bucket on each side.

A bowling ball U.S. standard is 8.6 inches in diameter. If you carried a bowling ball cubic lattice (we will not object to the packaging efficiency), each cube face has a length of:

(8.6 inches / ball) (8.44x10 ^ 7 balls on each side) (1 foot/12 inches) (1 mile/5280 feet) = 11,455 miles per side.

As the earth is only about 8000 kilometers in diameter, Cube bowling ball is much larger than the earth!

You can use my methods to calculate other statistics are absurd, as you said.

rhsaunde... said...

The mole concept is rarely applied to macroscopic objects, because it is a very big number. One mole of atoms or molecules is 6.023E23 it a mass of people with a hundred billion worlds with a population density of the earth now.

Anonymous said...

My teacher said the mole in terms of marshmallow. If you have a mole of marshmallows, which could cover the whole of Australia and the layer more than 1 km thick. Hope that helps

Anonymous said...

My teacher said the mole in terms of marshmallow. If you have a mole of marshmallows, which could cover the whole of Australia and the layer more than 1 km thick. Hope that helps

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