No subscript suggests one atom, for example carbon monoxide - CO - each molecule contains one atom of carbon and one atom of oxygen. As opposed to carbon dioxide - CO2 - in which each molecule has one atom of carbon and two atoms of oxygen.
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
There are 21 atoms, because there are 9 atoms of Carbon 8 atoms of Hydrogen and 4 atoms of Oxygen.
The subscript is the number of atoms.Example: U3O8Uranium octoxide has 3 uranium atoms and 8 oxygen atoms.
Subscript (:This is a subscript: (Na2) the "2" is the Subscript.
The subscript that is to the right of the element symbol, no subscript means 1. Example H2O, 2 hydrogen 1 oxygen
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
It tells you how many atoms of an element there are in a molocule.
Yes. No subscript means that there is just one.
The subscript to the left of the element symbol (unless it doesn't have a subscript; then the number of of atoms in the element is 1)
The subscript to the right of an element tells you how many atoms of that particular element are in a molecule. For example, in the water molecule H2O, there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
Subscript
There are 21 atoms, because there are 9 atoms of Carbon 8 atoms of Hydrogen and 4 atoms of Oxygen.
The number of atoms of that element in the molecule
The subscript in a chemical formula represents the amount of that atom in that compound's formula.
The subscript that is to the right of the element symbol, no subscript means 1. Example H2O, 2 hydrogen 1 oxygen
The subscript is the number of atoms.Example: U3O8Uranium octoxide has 3 uranium atoms and 8 oxygen atoms.
That would be subscript.