This question has nothing to do with chemistry; rather simple math. If you have 3 of something, and you divide it by 3 of something, you're going to end up with 1 something. Moles or any other units can be discounted when doing this, all you need to do is divide three by three.
In the ideal gas law equation, the gas constant (R), temperature (T), and number of moles (n) are related by the equation 3/2nRT. This equation shows that the product of the number of moles, the gas constant, and the temperature is equal to 3/2 times the ideal gas constant.
To calculate the number of atoms in 3 moles of potassium nitrate (KNO3), you use Avogadro's number, which is 6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol. First, calculate the molar mass of KNO3 (101.1 g/mol) then multiply that by 3 to get the total mass in grams. Next, divide the total mass by the molar mass to get the number of moles, and finally multiply the number of moles by Avogadro's number to get the number of atoms. For 3 moles of KNO3, there are approximately 5.4 x 10^24 atoms.
The molar mass of CuSO4 is 159.6 g/mol. To find the mass of 3 moles of CuSO4, multiply the molar mass by the number of moles: 3 moles * 159.6 g/mol = 478.8 grams. Therefore, there are 478.8 grams in 3 moles of CuSO4.
There are (~6.022 \times 10^{23}) atoms in one mole of sulfur. Therefore, in 3 moles of sulfur there are (~3 \times 6.022 \times 10^{23} \approx 1.807 \times 10^{24}) atoms of sulfur.
The number of hydrogen atoms is 14,290540253661.10e23.
3 goes into 339 113 times. (3 x 113 = 339.)
This gives you the prime factorization of a number: 2 *2 *2 *2*3, as you climb the stairs while dividing. (two divides into 72, 36 times. Two divides into 36, 18 times. Two divideds into 19, 9 times. Three divides into 9, 3 times.) 3[3 2[9 2[18 2[36 2[72
The number of zeros is determined by how many times 12 divides into 15!. To determine this, since 12 = 22*3, we will look at how many times 2 and 3 divide into 15!. 2 divides 2,6,10,14 once, 4,12 twice, and 8 three times, so that 2 divides 15! exactly 11 times. 3 divides 3,6,12,15 once and 9 twice, so that 3 divides 15! exactly 6 times. From this, we can see that 12 divides into 15! exactly 5 times, since 125=210*35. In other words, the base-12 representation of 15! ends in 5 zeros.
The smallest prime number that evenly divides into 33 is 3.
3 does.
check if 2 divides the Numbercheck if 3 divides the Numbercheck if 5 divides the Number...check if any prime numbers less than the square root of the Number divide the NumberIf any do, the Number is composite; otherwise the Number is prime.This is called the Sieve of Erasthenes.An easy way to check if a prime number divides the Number in base ten (if you don't have a calculator) is to add or subtract 1 or 3 times the prime number to the Number, so that the sum or difference is a multiple of ten (if the prime number isn't 2 or 5). Knock off the zero. If the prime number divides the new number, it also divides the Number; otherwise it doesn't.
Molarity = number of moles / number of liters. For this question the number of moles is 3 and the number of liters is 0.5 So 3/0.5 = 6 The solution is 6 M.
The smallest prime number that divides 147 evenly is three (3).
In order to go from moles to number of particles in any substance you simply multiply the number of moles by Avagadro's number (6.02 x 10^23). Once you have the number of molecules (in general it's particles), you would multiply the number of molecules by the number of atoms in each molecule. In water there are 3 atoms per molecule (2 hydrogens, 1 oxygen),so you'd mulitply by 3.Summarizing: You have to multiply the number of water moles by Avagadro's number (6.02 x 10^23) and then again by number of atoms per molecule (3).n timesA times 3 = number of atoms in 'x' moles of water
3 and 17.
1 and 3
2 and 3