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Chlorine ion (particularly Chloride ion) is more stable than Chlorine molecule
The units are incompatible. Millimetres are linear, micro-litres are for volume.
no, Cl is bigger
An atom of an element is usually smaller than a molecule of a compound. Molecules are made by bonding 2 or more atoms, of one or more elements. The molecule is the smallest particle of a compound.
Because the molecule is smaller than than the filter paper pores.
no virus is smaller than virus.
Chlorine ion (particularly Chloride ion) is more stable than Chlorine molecule
The atom of an element is smaller than a molecule.
A proton is smaller than a nucleus, which is smaller than an atom, which is again smaller than a molecule.
No, a virus is much smaller than bacteria.
A single oxygen atom is smaller than a molecule.
Not intentionally, for when they do - the virus eats them.
Since a virus is far smaller than a typical cell (much smaller than a prokaryote) a virus cannot be seen by a regular microscope. To see a virus, you should get an electron microscope.
Yes, considerably so. In general, positive ions are smaller than their neutral atoms, and negative ions are larger than their neutral atoms.
Viruses are typically composed of RNA surrounded by a capsid (protein shell). This would mean by definition that the virus molecule, which is technically considered nonliving, is larger than a protein strand (because the capsid is made of protein).
Yes, viruses are smaller than bacteria.
Larger.