I suppose that you think to a chemical formula.
Example: table salt (sodium chloride) has the chemical formula NaCl.
formula is a short way of writing a compund
Chemical Formula
formula
Formula
The ground state shorthand notation for mercury is [Xe] 6s25d10 [Xe] 6s26d10 [Rn] 6s26d10. Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at standard conditions for temperature and pressure.
"A yard of soil" is a shorthand notation for a cubic yard of soil. They are equivalent.
There are two possible 'noble gas' configurations:2 8 18 32 18 8 for Bi3-, or in shorthand configuration [Xe] 4f14, 5d10, 6s2 6p6and2 8 18 32 18 0 for Bi5+, or in shorthand configuration [Xe] 4f14, 5d10, 6s0 6p0Bismuth (as metaloid atom) in elemental notation: [Xe] 4f14, 5d10, 6s2 6p3
The shorthand electron configuration of magnesium is [Ne]3s2.
Perchlorate, being an ionic compound, does not have a chemical symbol, per say. The chemical notation is ClO4-, if that is what you were asking.
19F.
[Ar]4s23d104p2
The ground state shorthand notation for mercury is [Xe] 6s25d10 [Xe] 6s26d10 [Rn] 6s26d10. Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at standard conditions for temperature and pressure.
Carbon has the chemical symbol of C and an atomic number of 6. Its shorthand or electron configuration is 1s2 2s2 2p2.
The shorthand way to write a compound is by using chemical formulas or symbols. For example, water is written as H2O, where "H" represents hydrogen and "O" represents oxygen. Another compound, carbon dioxide, is written as CO2, where "C" represents carbon and "O" represents oxygen.
An Exponent is a shorthand notation for repeated multiplication of the same factor. For instance: 5^4 actually means 5 x 5 x 5 x 5 = 625
Scientific notation.
The electron configuration (short form) of fermium is: [Rn]5f127s2.
Exponents Example: 12x12x12=123
Chocolate is a mixture not a compound. There is, therefore, no simple scientific notation.
[Ar]4s^2 3d^6
[Xe]6s^24f^145d^106p^2 i think this is right. !