Atoms
in sentence
294 examples of Atoms in a sentence
So my vision is that, just like every scientist knows the word "atom," that matter is made out of atoms, every scientist would know the words like "the cloud," saying "Yes, and," and science will become much more creative, make many, many more unexpected discoveries for the benefit of us all, and would also be much more playful.
"If justice is removed," said Adam Smith, the father of capitalism, "the great, the immense fabric of human society must in a moment crumble into atoms."
I can't define where I begin and where I end, because the
atoms
and the molecules of my arm blended with the
atoms
and molecules of the wall.
The balls are the atoms, the sticks are the bonds between the
atoms.
This is a protein made up of 100,000
atoms.
And it's a world that's very different from our everyday world, made up of trillions of
atoms.
After all, it gives us the rules that tell us how the
atoms
fit together to make organic molecules.
So does all inanimate matter, made up of trillions of
atoms.
Because once you put together trillions of atoms, that quantum weirdness just dissolves away.
To paraphrase a description in the book, he says: At the molecular level, living organisms have a certain order, a structure to them that's very different from the random thermodynamic jostling of
atoms
and molecules in inanimate matter of the same complexity.
They make up a single, giant edifice, obeying the same physical laws and all made from the same types of atoms, electrons, protons, quarks, neutrinos that make up you and me.
Well, in this case, a mole is a concept that we use in chemistry to count molecules, atoms, just about anything extremely small.
Have you ever wondered how many
atoms
there are in the universe?
There was no clear difference between
atoms
and molecules.
This example is a little misleading, because gases take up a lot of space due to the high kinetic energy of the gas particles, and it leaves you thinking
atoms
are bigger than they really are.
Atoms
and molecules are so small, that chemists have bundled them into groups called moles.
In 1955, scientists at UC Berkeley successfully created 17
atoms
of a previously undiscovered element.
Is it a particle, like atoms, or is it a wave, like ripples on the surface of a pond?
For instance, when you shine light on a metal, the light transfers its energy to the
atoms
in the metal in discrete packets called quanta.
Today, things are largely made up of atoms, but hundreds of seconds after the Big Bang, it was too hot for electrons to join atomic nuclei to make
atoms.
Stars die by this same intersection, this time flung outward in a violent collision of smaller atoms, intersecting and efficiently fusing into altogether new and heavier things.
Everything we see is made up of tiny, indivisible bits of stuff called
atoms.
Centuries of scientific thought and experimentation have established that the real elements, things like hydrogen, carbon, and iron, can be broken down into
atoms.
The only thing wrong with Leucippus's idea is that
atoms
are, in fact, divisible.
Furthermore, his
atoms
idea turns out to explain just a small part of what the universe is made of.
Leucippus's atoms, and the things they're made of, actually make up only about 5% of what we know to be there.
All the stuff that's made of
atoms
is visible.
Another, more important difference is the type of bond between the carbon
atoms.
One was Einstein's theory of relativity, the other was arguably even more revolutionary: quantum mechanics, a mind-meltingly strange yet stunningly successful new way of understanding the microworld, the world of
atoms
and particles.
If it wasn't there, those particles would have no mass, and no
atoms
could form and there would be no us.
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