Examples of using An atom in English and their translations into Norwegian
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Ionization energy and Atomic number Ionization energy is the energy needed to remove the most loosely attached electron from an atom.
Note: Reporting Services includes an Atom rendering extension that generates the feeds from report definition files.
An atom with the same number of electrons as another, but a different number of protons The standard form of an element.
Oh yeah, the universe is just an atom of the ball in the hands of the alien creatures.
In the inner cells of her body, there's an atom.
forming the nucleus of an atom, a quantum entanglement appears.
you can calculate the volume of the universe to the size of an atom.
built to look like an atom.
not in the form of an atom.
In 1932 Heisenberg wrote a three part paper which describes the modern picture of the nucleus of an atom.
therefore its value cannot be diminished by even an atom.
These mirrors are doing what an electron does inside an atom, they're jiggling around.
Sensing: Between an amoeba and an atom» is anchored and angered in art as a praxis
He also wrote The History and Adventures of an Atom(1769), which gave his view of British politics during the Seven Years' War under the guise of a tale from ancient Japan.
nuclear power plants convert the energy released from the nucleus of an atom via nuclear fission that takes place in a nuclear reactor.
He also published The History and Adventures of an Atom(1769), which gave his opinion of British politics during the Seven Years' War in the guise of a tale from ancient Japan.
nuclear power plants convert the energy released from the nucleus of an atom via nuclear fission that takes place in a nuclear reactor.
In physics, the mean free path is the average distance travelled by a moving particle(such as an atom, a molecule, a photon) between successive impacts(collisions),
save the export file as an Atom service document(. atomsvc) file for future use.
In physics, the mean free path is the average distance travelled by a moving particle(such as an atom, a molecule, a photon) between successive impacts(collisions),[1] which modify its direction or energy
