Author Topic: HAPPY MOLE DAY!!!!!  (Read 1829 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Locutus of Borg

  • 28
  • Who counted those posts?????????????
HAPPY MOLE DAY (10/23)

6.02 * 10^23  Watermelon Seeds: Would be found inside a melon slightly larger than the moon.

6.02 * 10^23  Donut Holes: Would cover the earth and be 5 miles (8 km) deep.

6.02 * 10^23  Pennies: Would make at least 7 stacks that would reach the moon.

6.02 * 10^23  Grains of Sand: Would be more than all of the sand on Miami Beach.

6.02 * 10^23  Blood Cells: Would be more than the total number of blood cells found in every human on earth.
We are the Borg
We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own

Resistance is FUTILE

 

Offline Aardwolf

  • 211
  • Posts: 16,384
Coooool

 

Offline stuart133

  • 27
  • Check for Fail
And in atoms is only a few hundred grammes at most.

Also do you think that someone should enlighten those who do not get this.
Organiser of HLP 10. (Well at least so I am told)

Stuart you're running this one now ain't ya? So get choosing. :p

 

Offline Blue Lion

  • Star Shatterer
  • 210

 

Offline Aardwolf

  • 211
  • Posts: 16,384
And in atoms is only a few hundred grammes at most.

Also do you think that someone should enlighten those who do not get this.

1 gram = 1 mole of carbon 12

 

Offline Scotty

  • 1.21 gigawatts!
  • 211
  • Guns, guns, guns.
1 gram = 1 mole of Hydrogen.  1 mole of Carbon 12 is 12 grams.

Basically, 6.02 x 1023 is called Avogadro's Number.  It is the number of atoms that combined totals that element's atomic weight in grams.

 

Offline Mongoose

  • Rikki-Tikki-Tavi
  • Global Moderator
  • 212
  • This brain for rent.
    • Steam
    • Something
1 gram = 1 mole of Hydrogen.  1 mole of Carbon 12 is 12 grams.
One mole of hydrogen is really something more like 1.01 grams.  The standard is actually based on carbon; i.e., one mole of carbon-12 is precisely 12 grams.

 

Offline stuart133

  • 27
  • Check for Fail
1 gram = 1 mole of Hydrogen.  1 mole of Carbon 12 is 12 grams.
One mole of hydrogen is really something more like 1.01 grams.  The standard is actually based on carbon; i.e., one mole of carbon-12 is precisely 12 grams.

Now there is someone who knows his chemistry.
Also if anyone is interested the reason for this is that there are different isotopes of Hydrogen. The normal one weighs 1, the heavier ones weigh 2 and 3. (That is relative atomic mass) The RAM of an element takes into account these isotopes, and their relative abundances.
Organiser of HLP 10. (Well at least so I am told)

Stuart you're running this one now ain't ya? So get choosing. :p

 

Offline Mongoose

  • Rikki-Tikki-Tavi
  • Global Moderator
  • 212
  • This brain for rent.
    • Steam
    • Something
I don't know how well I know it, but when you take two classes in high school and one in college, that little "1.01" on the periodic table that you have to keep plugging into your calculator tends to stick with you. :p

 

Offline Scotty

  • 1.21 gigawatts!
  • 211
  • Guns, guns, guns.
It's really 1.0097, but who's counting? :P  That little blip is because the mass of one mole accounts for isotopes that may be found in the sample.  The overwhelming majority of Hydrogen masses only 1, but there is enough Hydrogen-2 and -3 to throw it off by the smallest amount.  We generally measure from Carbon-12 because it is very prevalent in applications of science, and a convenient mark to measure from.

 

Offline Ford Prefect

  • 8D
  • 26
  • Intelligent Dasein
This thread just made me very nostalgic for all the times I cheated hardcore in high school chemistry.
"Mais est-ce qu'il ne vient jamais à l'idée de ces gens-là que je peux être 'artificiel' par nature?"  --Maurice Ravel

  

Offline Pred the Penguin

  • 210
  • muahahaha...
    • EaWPR
How large would be said donut holes?