Is smoke particles in the air best example of brownian motion?
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The smoke is a mixture of air and tiny 'dust' particles, which are much larger than the air molecules and undergo Brownian motion. Watching the dust particles under a microscope in a smoke cell (where the smoke is at rest), one can directly observe this Brownian motion
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Answer:
The smoke is a mixture of air and tiny 'dust' particles, which are much larger than the air molecules and undergo Brownian motion. Watching the dust particles under a microscope in a smoke cell (where the smoke is at rest), one can directly observe this Brownian motion
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