In particle physics, the superscript and subscript of a particle, such as an "x" particle, typically denote properties like charge and generation. The superscript often indicates the particle's charge (e.g., +1 or -1), while the subscript may specify other characteristics such as its generation or type (e.g., a specific quantum number). For example, an x particle might be represented as ( x^{+1}_{1} ), where +1 represents its charge and 1 indicates its generation. However, without specific context, the exact meaning can vary.
The superscript for platinum is Pt2+ and the subscript for platinum is Pt.
Incomplete dominance is typically denoted with a subscript to indicate the blending of traits in heterozygous individuals.
wouldnt it just be Si The superscript is the mass number (28) and the subscript is the atomic number (14).
To type small numbers for chemical formulas and exponents, you can use the subscript and superscript functions in most text editors or word processing software. In HTML, you can use for subscript and for superscript. You can also use keyboard shortcuts like Ctrl+= (for superscript) and Ctrl+Shift+= (for subscript) on some platforms.
place insertation point where you want to write superscript, then on Home tab look at Font section and press x2 icon, type text and when you finish with superscript press one more time x2 to turn off superscripting or just press control=shift=equal to turn superscript on and off
The superscript for platinum is Pt2+ and the subscript for platinum is Pt.
It would be a superscript.
superscript 63 and subscript 152 Eu (the super and subscript go before the symbol with superscript on top of the subscript)
ctrl = for subscript ctrl shift = for superscript
Incomplete dominance is typically denoted with a subscript to indicate the blending of traits in heterozygous individuals.
There are no keyboard shorcuts to do this. Instead you must select the cell (or text in a cell) right click, selecte formatting, and then click the superscript/subscript boxes. Welcome to the wonderful world of MS products.
subscript lower a round the baseline e.g H2O superscript rises a word above the baseline e.g4th
Michael W. Swagel has written: 'The determination of the g[subscript J]([superscript 3]P[subscript 1]) value and g[subscript J]([superscript 1]P[subscript 1]) value of barium and the ratio A([superscript 1]P[subscript 1])/[[Greek letter mu subscript O]g[subscript J]([superscript 1]P[subscript 1]) ] of mercury-199' -- subject(s): Barium, Mercury, Spectra, Spectrum analysis
The superscript is the atomic mass number, which is the sum of protons and neutrons. The subscript is the atomic number, which is the number of protons. For a hafnium nuclide with 107 neutrons, the superscript would be 180 (107 neutrons + 73 protons) and the subscript would be 73.
Factor out each prime by prime to obtain: 4 x 5 = 2 x 2 x 5 So the answer is 2² x 5 * * * * * and the word is "superscript", not subscript.
wouldnt it just be Si The superscript is the mass number (28) and the subscript is the atomic number (14).
"ctl"+ "shift" + "+" will give you a superscript