Physics, asked by adityakumar5838, 10 months ago

The size of a particle (or molecule) of matter is
very small. 1 litre (= 10-3 m3) of water has 6.02 x
1020 molecules, so the volume of a particle of water​

Answers

Answered by spadikazamfam
1

Answer:

Explanation:

One mole of water has 6.02x10^23 molecules.

1000 moles of water has 6.02x10^26 molecules.

1000 moles of water are 18000 grams or 18 kilograms.

With water density close to 1 kg/liter it makes 18 liters.

So 18 liters of water have 6.02x10^26 molecules.

In what world one liter of water will have 6.02x10^26 molecules?

But if you compress 6.02x10^26 molecules in one liter and assume molecules are small balls (they are not), each molecule will have 1.2x10^-10 m diameter…

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