A cP (continental polar) air mass is generally cool and dry.
A cP air mass is a continental polar air mass. It come from high latitudes over land. Such air masses are generally cool and dry.
it is a warm air mass over a continent
A warm air mass over a continent describes an air mass with the symbol ct
the answer is cold and dry.
warm and dry
The element with the chemical symbol of 8 is oxygen. Oxygen has an atomic mass of 15.9994 am and has a boiling point of -218.4 C.
maritime (m) and continental (c)
xxC, where the 'xx' is the mass number of the isotope, usually 12, 13 or 14. The 'C' simply means it is carbon.
Normally its a lowercase c, as in E=m(c)2. Energy=mass times the speed of light squared.
In the periodic table, numbers are not usually placed AFTER the symbol, but to the left and above and below. However, if the number appears AFTER the symbol, it usually tells you the atomic mass of the element. An example might be C-12 which refers to the isotope of carbon that has 12 protons and 12 electrons, and has an atomic mass of 12 amu.
The symbol for carbon is [ C ]
C, carbon.
A cT air mass refers to a type of air mass classification. The lowercase "c" stands for continental, or dry, while the uppercase "T" stands for tropical.
Well, in science I am learning atoms. Element: Carbon ....... Symbol: C ...... Atomic Number: 6 ....... Atomic Mass: 12 Element: Argon ......... Symbol: Ar...... Atomic Number: 18 ..... Atomic Mass: 40
The element with the chemical symbol of 8 is oxygen. Oxygen has an atomic mass of 15.9994 am and has a boiling point of -218.4 C.
maritime (m) and continental (c)
xxC, where the 'xx' is the mass number of the isotope, usually 12, 13 or 14. The 'C' simply means it is carbon.
From the volume of the flask, and the density of air under the conditions in the room, you can calculate the mass of air. The density of air varies with pressure, temperature, humidity, etc. At sea level and at 15 °C air has a density of approximately 0.001225 g/ml, so under these conditions, a liter flask would contain (1000 ml)(0.001225 g/ml) = 1.225 g of air.
The symbol for carbon is 'C'. Sometimes the atomic number (always 6) is written in subscript on the left of the 'C', and the atomic mass (normally one of 12, 13, 14) is written in superscript on the left of the 'C' in nuclear sciences. Carbon does not have an equation, it has a symbol. Carbon's symbol is C.
The symbol is " C "
The atomic number for sulfur id 16 on the Periodic Table of elements and it has the atomic weight/mass of 32.06.and the chemical symbol is the letter "C".
False. C is the symbol for Carbon. Cl is the symbol for chlorine.