its 3 times bigger than that of a hydrogen nucleus
"There is no such a thing as a stupid question."
THEY JUST NEED STUPID ANSWERS!!
= 47 lol smiley faces and one big fat Justin beiber
It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.
How much energy is required to move the electron of the hydrogen atom from the 1s to the 2s orbital
Relating to figures for our galaxy and expanding, then the Universe contains about 10% oxygen by molecule.
Well mostly this will be true, but it is not a generalistic rule! The Xenon atom (Xe) is much bigger (>210 pm) than the hydrogen fluoride (HF, about 92 pm) or methane (CH4, about 140 pm) molecules. (pm = pico-metre = 10-12 m.)
The atom is about 10,000 times as big as the nucleus.
A hydrogen atom has a diameter of about 60 picometers while a proton has a diameter of 1.75 femotometers. So a hydrogen atom's diameter is about 35,000 times that of a proton.
It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.
The barium atom has a much bigger radius.
There are about 1011 galaxies on the observable Universe. The actual Universe is much bigger, but nobody knows how much bigger. Answer2: Thee are >1012 galaxies in the universe.
How much energy is required to move the electron of the hydrogen atom from the 1s to the 2s orbital
Relating to figures for our galaxy and expanding, then the Universe contains about 10% oxygen by molecule.
There are several hundred billion galaxies in the KNOWN (or observable) Universe; the actual Universe, however, is believed to be much, much bigger.
Chlorine is very electronegative and pulls on the hydrogen's single electron, forming a positive end where the Hydrogen atom is, and a negative charge where the Chlorine is. This is because the Chlorine pulls much harder on the electron than Hydrogen does.
the universe apparently never stops going. Plus the galaxy's are included with the universe :)
The element hydrogen makes up about 74.9% by mass of the sun. As the mass of the sun is approximately 1.9891 x 1030 kilograms, the hydrogen content is about 1.4898 x 1030 kilograms. A link is provided below for comfirmation and further investigation.
No, it's the other way. The OBSERVABLE Universe has roughly 10 to the power 11 galaxies; the entire Universe is believed to be much, much larger, though nobody knows for sure how large exactly.
The observable Universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years; that would be a diameter of 92 billion light-years. The entire Universe is likely much bigger, but it isn't know how much bigger.