An atom is too tiny to be in a liquid . . . some atoms are the building blocks of liquids, though. For instance, the atoms of hydrogen and oxygen work together to form water, which can be a liquid.
All of the atoms of the same element look the same. You can't tell
by looking at an atom whether it's in a liquid, a solid, or a gas.
It is 0.5 on a digital scale
Example: the atomic mass number of uranium is 238,02891 - exprimed in atomic mass units.
yes
A clear liquid. It is salt water.
Blood is thick, red liquid.
the atomic symbol of oxygen looks like this 0
Scroll down to related links and look at "Kelvin scale in comparison to degrees Celsius scale".
In bulk, they look a lot like liquid soap; many liquid crystals are made of materials that chemically are a lot like soap.
A picometer is a unit of distance. It is one trillionth of a meter, or one billionth of a millimeter. It is small enough to be on the atomic scale - a hydrogen atom is about 31 pm (picometers).
a scale factor looks like a proportion but in the end it just looks like a ratio.
No.
look like liquid
they look like plastic in texture.
It is 0.5 on a digital scale
Example: the atomic mass number of uranium is 238,02891 - exprimed in atomic mass units.
yes
A scale looks looks like the axis of a graph or a numbered list. In this case I believe it is called the Mohs' scale of hardness.