If you break down the chemical by it's elements and apply some simple rules, you can find the formula for a chemical compound.
It is difficult to write chemical formulae correctly in this forum but this is the best I can do - hopefully you will recognise how it should be written correctly ie with numbers written smaller and low down. C6H7KO2
NH3(aq) in water droplets (mist, condensed).(Though some prefer to write down NH4OH, this is not the formula of a constant arrangement, any value of n from 0 till 6 will do in NH3.nH2O, not only n=1)
They did and left precise directions. Historians today have been able to reproduce what they did in mummification. NGEO had a real good program on this not too long ago.
methanolammonia (NH4)ammonia (NH4)
Most oxygen is found as a diatomic molecule. (Yes, there is some ozone, but not much down here. And it's unstable, spontaneously reverting to O2 in a few minutes.) There are two atoms of oxygen in an oxygen molecule. Methane is a carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms. O2 and CH4 are the oxygen and methane molecules.
methane and carbon
If you break down the chemical by it's elements and apply some simple rules, you can find the formula for a chemical compound.
It is difficult to write chemical formulae correctly in this forum but this is the best I can do - hopefully you will recognise how it should be written correctly ie with numbers written smaller and low down. C6H7KO2
In order to find the chemical formula you would need to break down each individual ingredient chemical formula. That would be impossible.
write down the formula for any substance entering into reaction.place the (+) sign between the formulas as needed and put the yield after the last one.
Carbon dioxide is nonpolar because of its linear structure: O=C=O
Yes
nCn formula
FeO, Fe3O4, and Fe2O3
NH3(aq) in water droplets (mist, condensed).(Though some prefer to write down NH4OH, this is not the formula of a constant arrangement, any value of n from 0 till 6 will do in NH3.nH2O, not only n=1)
The answer depends on what the formula is for: its area, ratio of sides, size of angles, etc.