Not every chemical formula requires subscript. For example table salt is NaCl, sodium chloride. No subscript. But most chemical formulae do require subscript, such as water, H2O.
It is called a subscript. For example: In the formula for water (H2O), 2 is the subscript indicating that there are 2 hydrogen atoms in the compound .
With Word, Word Perfect, Open Source Writer: Format, Font and Subscript or Superscript.
the purpose of a subscript is to tell how many atoms of that chemical is used in the formulaThe number of atoms of the same element in the molecule ~APEX
The easiest way would be to learn superscript and subscript shortcuts. For eg: Sulphuric acid is H2SO4. Now highlight 2 and control+command+ minus shortcut makes it a subscript. Repeat it for every element.
No. The function described in the question is performed by subscript, not superscript, numbers.
Subscript
The number of atoms of the same element in the molecule
It is called a subscript. For example: In the formula for water (H2O), 2 is the subscript indicating that there are 2 hydrogen atoms in the compound .
Subscripts are most familiar to use in the writing of chemical formulas such as H2O -- the 2 should be a subscript -- and in mathematics you will see variables with subscripts.
its usually indicated by a subscript! :D
The subscript in a chemical formula refers to the _____.
The subscript Number of atoms of that element in the molecule.
In chemical formulas, a subscript number signifies the number of atoms of the specified element in a molecule. For example, H2O (where the "2" is subscript) is the formula for water and represents 2 hydrogen atoms combined with 1 atom of oxygen.
The subscript in a chemical formula represents the amount of that atom in that compound's formula.
With Word, Word Perfect, Open Source Writer: Format, Font and Subscript or Superscript.
subscript
the purpose of a subscript is to tell how many atoms of that chemical is used in the formulaThe number of atoms of the same element in the molecule ~APEX