Chemistry, asked by Smritidewan, 5 months ago

Write the postulates of Dalton's atomic
theory?​

Answers

Answered by supriyaambarshetti
3

Explanation:

1. All matter consists of indivisible particles called atoms.

2. Atoms of the same element are similar in shape and mass, but differ from the atoms of other elements.

3. Atoms cannot be created or destroyed.

4. Atoms of different elements may combine with each other in a fixed, simple, whole number ratios to form compound atoms.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

A postulate is a statement that is accepted without proof. Axiom is another name for a postulate.

Explanation:

Postulates of Dalton's atomic theory are :

All matter is made up of tiny, indivisible particles called atoms.

All atoms of a specific element are identical in mass, size, and other properties. However, atoms of different element exhibit different properties and vary in mass and size.

Atoms can neither be created nor destroyed. Furthermore, atoms cannot be divided into smaller particles.

Atoms of different elements can combine with each other in fixed whole-number ratios in order to form compounds.

Atoms can be rearranged, combined, or separated in chemical reactions

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