Examples of using Atomic number in English and their translations into Thai
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Its atomic number is 86.
Is equal to the atomic number.
Its atomic number is six.
The number of protons is equal to the atomic number.
Episode 5 atomic number 48.
A radioactive metallic element with atomic number 88.
Lithium is atomic number of three.
Xenon is a chemical element with symbol Xe and atomic number 54.
The atomic number of silicon is 14.
Oxygen is a chemical element with symbol O and atomic number 8.
It's the atomic number for technetium.
Argon is a chemical element with symbol Ar and atomic number 18.
The atomic number of oxygen is eight.
Xenon is a chemical element with symbol Xe and atomic number 54.
So the atomic number for carbon is six.
An arrangement of chemical elements in order of increasing atomic number.
Display the atomic number of the scanned object.
And the number of protons, this is defined as the atomic number.
And the atomic number is the number that you see up there.
A heavy, radioactive, man-made metallic element with atomic number 94.
The atomic number is the number of protons. So we're good.
Platinum is a chemical element with the chemical symbol Pt and an atomic number of 78.
So we can use the atomic number also as an indicator of how many electrons in a neutral atom.
Argon is a chemical element with symbol Ar and atomic number 18.
And this carbon by definition has an atomic number of 6, but we can rewrite it here just so that we can remind ourselves.
Nitrogen is a colorless and odorless gas with symbol N and atomic number 7.
If you know the frequency of the various elements are X-rays and their atomic numbers could namely also determine the number of protons in the nucleus.
Explosives& Narcotics Detection: Explosives& narcotics alarm and highlight according to atomic number.
Hafnium is a chemical element with symbol Hf and atomic number 72. A lustrous, silvery, gray, tetravalent transition metal, hafnium chemically resembles zirconium and is found in many zirconium minerals.
Eric Sherri, of the University of California, Los Angeles, is one of those who advocate a radical revision of the Periodic Table of the Elements. He supported a more thorough modification: by placing all 30 elements of the F region between the current second and third families, the vertical column was changed from 18 columns to 32 columns. In this way, the atomic numbers in the periodic table can be consecutively arranged.
