probably 3 because H2O. 2 Hydrogen and only one Oxygen. 2+1=3.
1
A single drop of water contains about 2 sextillion (2×1021) atoms of oxygen.
1. A drop of water is a small volume and cannot weigh 5 g. 2. 5 g of water contain ca. 5.1023 atoms.
A drop of water typically consists of 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. This is represented by the chemical formula H2O.
There are roughly 8.3 x 10^22 atoms in a drop of seawater, but only a very small portion of these would be gold atoms. Gold is present in seawater in very trace amounts, estimated to be around 0.0000000004 mg of gold per liter of seawater, so the number of actual gold atoms would be miniscule compared to the total number of atoms in the drop.
no unless if you drop it down a hole that goes straight to the atom clasher in France and at the exact same time that they were clashing the atoms but that is impossible because it is so far down and so protected that it is impossible to get in unless your a scientist working for the atom clasher people.
One drop at a time dose
When energy is added to an atom, the electrons move to outer levels of the shell. When they drop back down, they release the energy in the form of photons.
Approx. 0,33.1018 hydrogen atoms for a drop of 1o microliters.
No, atoms are much smaller than a drop of water. Atoms are the basic building blocks of matter and are incredibly small. They are typically on the scale of picometers, which is about one hundredth of a nanometer in size, while a drop of water is on the order of millimeters.
Please be careful that you do not drop that fragile atom.
No.