Atoms are more then a million times smaller then human hair. Hope that helps =3!!
The nucleus of the atom has a diameter of about meter, whereas the atomic diameter is about meter. This means that the nucleus has a diameter 10,000 times smaller than the atom. The nucleus of the atom has a diameter of about meter, whereas the atomic diameter is about meter. This means that the nucleus has a diameter 10,000 times smaller than the atom.
pubic hair
Hair is important to the human nose. It provides filtration for incoming air.
It Doesn't As: X=2.5cm which is 2000 times the length of the width of on and that is too small for the human.
The follicle of a human hair contains both DNA and RNA. The shaft of a hair contains only mitochondrial DNA.
Transistors are made that are smaller than a human hair. Used as part of an integrated circuit chip, which may contain thousands of transistors.
Transistors are made that are smaller than a human hair. Used as part of an integrated circuit chip, which may contain thousands of transistors.
Some transistors are as big as a bucket, and some are smaller as an average human hair's width.
The nucleus of the atom has a diameter of about meter, whereas the atomic diameter is about meter. This means that the nucleus has a diameter 10,000 times smaller than the atom. The nucleus of the atom has a diameter of about meter, whereas the atomic diameter is about meter. This means that the nucleus has a diameter 10,000 times smaller than the atom.
It is about 2 times bigger.
no, as much as people talk about revitalizing their hair, hair, by the time it exits your scalp is a column of dead cells, similar but smaller than your fingernails.
how many times thicker is giraffes tail hair than our human hair
yes 3 times faster
Graphene is an atomic-scale honeycomb lattice made of carbon atoms. It is the world's first 2D material and is one million times smaller than the diameter of a single human hair
Atomic Size is the going across any period, atomic radius is decreasing in size due to the increase in the number of electrons is attracted toward the nucleus. Going down any group, there are a large increase in atomic size. The size of an atom depends on where the electrons are distributed outside the nucleus.
It's not an idiom that I'm familiar with. It sounds like a description - something is either literally 3 miles long and smaller than a human hair in diameter, or it is an exaggeration of something being very long and thin.
That depends on the transistor, but in modern integrated circuits, a single transistor is somewhere around a hundred atoms thick; the largest atom is about 0.5 nm in diameter, so a hundred atoms would be about 50 nm. On the other hand, a typical human hair, according to Wikipedia, has a width "from 0.017 to 0.18 millimeters"; that would be 17-180 µm, which is much larger.