The lightest gaseous element is hydrogen, with a density around 7% that of air; The heaviest is radon, with a density of around 8.5 times that of air.
Radon is radioactive, and relatively short lived; the heaviest stable element is xenon, with a density around 4.5 times that of air.
The series that lists particles in order from smallest to greatest mass typically starts with the fundamental particles: electrons and neutrinos, followed by quarks (up and down quarks being the lightest), then protons and neutrons (which are made up of quarks), and finally larger composite particles like mesons and baryons. Among these, the electron is the lightest, followed by neutrinos, while protons and neutrons have significantly greater mass. Ultimately, heavier particles such as the W and Z bosons, and the Higgs boson, rank higher in mass than these fundamental particles.
Gas, Liquid, Solid
Gas, liquid, soil
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
The series that lists particles in order from smallest to greatest mass typically starts with the fundamental particles: electrons and neutrinos, followed by quarks (up and down quarks being the lightest), then protons and neutrons (which are made up of quarks), and finally larger composite particles like mesons and baryons. Among these, the electron is the lightest, followed by neutrinos, while protons and neutrons have significantly greater mass. Ultimately, heavier particles such as the W and Z bosons, and the Higgs boson, rank higher in mass than these fundamental particles.
Gas, Liquid, Solid
Gas, liquid, soil
a desk
The order from greatest energy of particles to least energy of particles is: Plasma > Gas > Liquid > Solid.
The three stages of matter are solid, liquid, and gas. In the solid state, particles are tightly packed and have a fixed shape and volume. In the liquid state, particles are more loosely packed and flow easily, taking the shape of their container. In the gas state, particles are far apart and have neither a fixed shape nor volume.
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
Electron, proton, nucleus, atom
The series that lists particles in order from smallest to greatest mall is the Standard Model of particle physics, which categorizes particles into quarks, leptons, and bosons based on their properties. Quarks are the smallest, followed by leptons, and then bosons, which are force carriers.
You must be referring to the standard three card method of cataloging books in a public library. One card lists the author. One lists the title. One lists the subject matter. Each card is placed in its own section, author, title and subject matter so that there are three different ways to locate a book.
The Wikipedia lists an estimate of 10 to the power 80 hydrogen atoms for the observable Universe. The total number of particles would be somewhere in that order, depending on what "particles" you are thinking of.